

Harper Anderson of Ivy Depot, Virginia, the nephew and heir of Meriwether Lewis, for letters, documents, and family traditions to Mrs. Louis, grandsons of Governor Clark, and to C. The author hereby acknowledges obligation to the Lewis and Clark families, especially to William Hancock Clark of Washington, D.C., and John O'Fallon Clark of St. Thank you for respecting the efforts of this edition. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Amazon and purchase your own copy of the ISBN edition available below. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. It may not be resold or given away to other people. Replica of buckskins worn by most of the expedition while they were at Fort Clatsop.This edition is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. Indian canoes were usually much more elaborate and finely built than the workmanlike designs utilized by Lewis and Clark.Īnother view of a typical canoe design used by Pacific Northwest Indian tribes.Īnother view of the statue depicting the moment that Lewis and Clark saw the Pacific Ocean. Inside the Visitors Center you will find a bronze statue depicting the moment that Lewis and Clark sighted the Pacific Ocean. National Park Service Visitor’s Center at Fort Clatsop (located off Highway 101 south of Astoria, Oregon) Replica of a log canoe constructed by Lewis and Clark while at Fort Clatsop.Īnother view of the log canoes used by Lewis and Clark while they were at Fort Clatsop. Looking toward the gate of Fort Clatsop from the rifle range to the east. The men lived four to a room, sleeping in paired bunkbeds.Įxterior view of a chimney in the roof above the enlisted men’s quarters.

Each room had a separate fireplace, which unfortunately cannot be seen in the modern reconstruction of Fort Clatsop.Īnother view of the enlisted men’s quarters. Interior view of the enlisted men’s quarters. The expedition ingeniously used the stump of one of the large trees as a desk in the enlisted quarters. The interior of the store room located next to the officers quarters.Įnlisted men’s quarters constructed along the western wall of Fort Clatsop. Interior view of the Officers lodgings at Fort Clatsop.Īnother view of the officers quarters occupied by Lewis and Clark at Fort Clatsop. Interior view of the Charbonneau family quarters. Sentry box located inside Fort Clatsop next to the officers quarters. At the end of this structure is the storeroom. The officers’ quarters are located just beyond the chimney. The door nearest to the camera is the Charbonneau family lodgings.
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The small gate is visible to the right of the flagpole.Īnother view of the quarters built along the eastern wall. Looking at the northern wall of Fort Clatsop from inside. There was also a small gate in the northern wall. The roofs of the enlisted men’s quarters and flagpole is visible from this angle.

Looking through the front gate of Fort Clatsop at the chimney of the fireplace heating the officers quarters, storeroom, and Charbonneau family quarters. Looking at the exterior of Fort Clatsop from the southeast.įront gate of Fort Clatsop viewed from the northeast. Path leading directly to the front gate of Fort Clatsop. The view that Captains Lewis and Clark woke up to every morning at Fort Clatsop.
