Expedition Essay

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    Haolun Xu Mrs. Skinner English 1106 11 May 2015 The Great Lewis and Clark Expedition I never learnt anything about the U.S. history before I came to a high school in Boston. The stories about Native Americans and exploration of west had always attracted me because nothing like that ever happened in the Chinese history. And this is the reason why I am going to do the Lewis and Clark Expedition. They were just so brave to explore a land that the Americans knew nothing about. Not only their spirit

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    Before Lewis and Clark’s famous expedition through the United States and towards the Pacific, Western North America was a great unknown. It was a mythical place where anything imaginable could exist. Moving West was not seen as a legitimate idea, it was not an ideal destination for homes and work. For the citizens of the early United States, all they knew was the East Coast. Even today, much of the US population is still located on the east coast. There was very little known about it and people were

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    author Justin Corfield (2010), the Lewis and Clark expedition was the first science project to receive federal funding. The expedition was a very costly mission. “He [Jefferson] requested that twenty-five hundred dollars be appropriated "for the purpose of extending the external commerce of the United States" by sending a military expedition…” (Newman, 2006). It took over a year to gather all the supplies needed before departing on the expedition. “He [Lewis] traveled to

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    Meriwether Lewis asked William Clark and I to join him on an expedition into the unknown. We had to go west and explore the Louisiana territory that Thomas Jefferson, our 3rd president, had bought to expand the United States. This expedition will be the greatest change in history and I got to experience it. Traveling for 8,000 miles in two-in a half years only having one job; explore the new area and come back alive. Not getting a specimen of a lady slipper flower was a mistake from Clark. I

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    Essay The Lewis and Clark Expedition

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    After being issued by President Thomas Jefferson to map, explore, and compile information on the land just bought through the Louisiana Purchase, Captain Meriwether Lewis and 2nd Lieutenant William Clark set off on one of the greatest expeditions of all time. This paper will explore what adversities were faced on the Corp of Discoveries. From militant Indians to diseases like dysentery, they faced it all. And as Captain Lewis documented, “We went as close to hell as you can go in this lifetime.”

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    The importance of the Lewis and Clarks expedition for America was immense. It changed the future country by strengthening the America’s claim to the areas north of California which would become Washington and Oregon. Lewis and Clark had great success which might not have happened without peaceful cooperation with the Indians. Lewis and Clark proved there was no Northwest Passage but showed the feasibility of an overland route to the Pacific Ocean. This opened up the area to further exploration and

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    The Lewis and Clark Expedition Missing Works Cited Exploration has always been a central theme in the development of the United States. The Louisiana Purchase, in 1803, made the government more eager to expand west. The newly acquired lands were in need of exploration. A team needed to be established to survey and document the new territory. The Lewis and Clark expedition would answer the unknown questions of the west. The expedition would not have been successful without the leadership

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    As we go back in 1802 Thomas Jefferson sent an expedition to the Western part of the United States after purchasing the land called Louisiana Territory. They were instructed to bring back maps, plants, animals, and discover a water way from the Mississippi River to the pacific Ocean. You will venture on an expedition back in time following Lewis and Clark as they journey through rough weathers and landscapes. Sacagawea; a former shoshone woman until kidnapped and raised by the Hidatsa Tribe. Now

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    unknown to science, nearly 50 Indian tribes, and the Rockies. Having started upstream on the Missouri River from their St. Louis-area camp—where they had been preparing for the expedition since fall 1803—on May 14, William Clark and nearly four dozen other men met up with Meriwether Lewis on May 20. The Lewis and Clark expedition—"the Corps of Discovery"—began making its way up the Missouri aboard a 55-foot-long (17-meter-long) keelboat and

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    Topic 3 Was Shackleton’s expedition a success or a failure? Why? Was Shackleton himself a success or failure for the expedition? Back up your answers using examples from the novel. Body Paragraph #1 – Expedition the expedition was a success because altho the team did not get to map out antarctica they got to see it with there own eyes and without that information we wouldn't know as much about the antarctic as we do today. from the novel BUt on the other hand the expedition was a failure because

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