Page 14 On to St. Louis The Corps of Discovery began to take shape. Meri- wether Lewis and William Clark headed the command as co-captains. They established an easy working style and quickly realized their skills complimented one another. As they traveled west- ward on the Ohio they hired key personnel and learned how to handle the keelboat in the tricky river currents. Their first attempt at seri- ous scientific work occurred at Cairo, Illinois where the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers came together. The two men studied the currents, and on November 19 turned the keel- boat, north, into the current of the Mississippi. The voyagers stopped and climbed Tower Rock on an island in the middle of the great river and rowed into Ft. Kaskaskia on November 25. Kaskaskia was the north- ern and western most fort of the United States when the Captains docked at the settlement of 467 people. Six soldiers enlisted at Kaskaskia from Russell Bissell's Company, 1st U.S. Infantry Regiment: Sgt. John Ordway and pri- vates Peter M. Weiser, Rich- a r d W i n d so r, P a t r i c k Gass, John Boley, and John Collins. In addition, John Dame, John Robertson, Ebeneezer Tuttle, Issac White, and Alexander Hamil- ton Willard of Capt. Amos Stoddard's company, U.S. Corps of Artillery, enlisted for the journey. This important crop of men added immeasurably to the success of the expedition. Francois Labiche, an- other half-Indian, half- Frenchman, enlisted with the expedition on November 30. Lewis remained at the fort while Clark and the new re- cruits pushed up stream. The presence of the mili- tary soldiers was not an acci- dent. From the start, the jour- ney was to be organized and operated as a military expedi- tion into the interior of the newly acquired territory. Clark's job became the training of the men for the westward journey. Lewis remained away from the men and took care of the paper- work and handling of the local politics. The lands the Corps of Discovery were to travel on were just in the process of being transferred to the United States so delicate ne- gotiations were critical. The keelboat passed Sainte Genevieve, wealthy community of 1,000 primar- ily French inhabitants, and continued toward St. Louis, a fur-trading city of about the same size as Sainte Genevieve. Lewis left Kaskaskia and arrived at Cahokia, Illinois traveling overland. The two captains reunited again along the banks of the Mississippi River on December 7, 1803. The men immediately went to work building log huts for their winter quarters and hunting parties searched for game further inland. The winter was time to learn to work as a cohesive unit to survive the adventures that lay in front of the men. Hinze is a professional historian and tour guide. He leads tours and presents at conferences on Lewis & Clark, and other topics per- taining to early American history, for the American History Education Associa- tion. You can reach Hinze at 1-800-298-1861 or AHEA2004@yahoo.com It’s what you learn after you know it all that counts - John Wooden - Illinois Valley News, Cave Junction, OR Wednesday, October 29, 2003