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CORPS OF DISCOVERY
LEWIS AND CLARK EXPEDITION
"WHERE IT ALL BEGAN"
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LEWIS
& CLARK
On October 4 or 5, Lewis pushed his boat and
pirogues back into the river and headed west for
the falls of the Ohio, some one hundred miles downstream.
On October 14, he was at the head of the falls,
which were actually long rapids created by a twenty-four-foot
drop of the river over a two-mile-long series of
limestone ledges. At the foot of the rapids on the
north bank, was Clarksville, Indiana Territory.
Louisville, Kentucky, was on the south bank.
On October 15, Lewis hired local pilots, who took
the boat and pirogues into the dangerous but passable
passages on the north bank. Safely through, Lewis
tied up at Clarksville and set off to meet his partner,
who was living with his older brother, General George
Rogers Clark.
When they shook hands, the Lewis and Clark Expedition
began.
(Undaunted Courage, Stephen Ambrose,
page 117.)
The keelboat and pirogues set off from Clarksville
on October 26.
(Undaunted Courage, Stephen Ambrose,
page 118.)
The George Rogers Clark home site in Clarksville
has been designated by the National Park Service
as an official site associated with the Lewis and
Clark National Historic Trail. The home site is
located on Harrison Avenue in Clarksville and is
part of the Falls of the Ohio State Park. This site
is where Meriwether Lewis and William Clark (younger
brother of George Rogers Clark) established a base
camp and later departed from here for their expedition
to explore the west on October 26, 1803.
Today a representation cabin of Clark's home stands
on the site and additional developments for this
site are in the works which are also part of the
Ohio River Greenway Commission. An annual festival
commemorating the departure is held the fourth weekend
in October.
