Contributors / Arlen Large

Arlen Large

Editor, We Proceeded On

Arlen Jim Large of Washington, D.C. was a correspondent of the Wall Street Journal and a past editor and frequent contributor to We Proceeded On, the journal of the Lewis and Clark Trail Heritage Foundation. He passed away in 1996. Many of his articles appear on Discovering Lewis & Clark.

 

Contributions

    River Dubois Recruits

    Going large and strong

    by

    On 22 December 1803, Drouillard arrived at Clark’s Camp Dubois with the eight lost soldiers from South West Point. They were a disappointing lot, except for Corporal Richard Warfington.

    Lewis and the Board of Agriculture

    by

    As the President’s private secretary, the 28-year-old Army captain wasn’t in the same league with the political heavy-weights on the new American Board of Agriculture.

    The Personnel Plan

    A small and fast corps

    by

    Moving between Philadelphia and Washington City in 1803, Lewis devised a plan for recruiting personnel while traveling to St. Louis. Plan A was to go down the Cumberland River, Plan B, the Ohio.

    Mackenzie’s Canada Crossing

    A role model for Lewis and Clark

    by

    He was the first literate traveler to cross the North American continent north of Mexico, beating Meriwether Lewis and William Clark by nearly 12 years. The Lewis and Clark journals often echo Mackenzie’s journal.

    James Wilkinson

    Secret Agent Number 13

    by

    James Wilkinson was one of the most duplicitous, avaricious, and altogether corrupt figures in the early history of the United States. At the time of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, he was a paid agent of the Spanish government.

    The President’s Secretary

    by

    It was 4 March 1801, Inauguration Day for the third president. Nine days previously Jefferson had asked Meriwether Lewis to serve as his private secretary in the raw new mansion called the President’s House.

    Nicholas Biddle

    by

    Nicholas Biddle (1786–1844), the first editor of the Lewis and Clark journals, was a seventeen-year-old college graduate and student of law in 1803. The work was published seven years after the return of the expedition.

    Weather Observations

    An enlightened approach

    by

    Three rows listing weather conditions and related remarks

    President Jefferson naturally was curious about weather conditions in the newly acquired expanse of Louisiana, and weather observations were on the long list of assignments for his exploring team. Jefferson instructed Lewis to record climate data observed on the trip.

    Ohio River Recruits

    by

    Dearborn gave the departing Lewis an order limiting his permanent size to 15 men. These soldiers also were to be obtained at Kaskaskia and other Illinois Army posts, or newly recruited into the Army from “suitable Men” encountered by Lewis along the way.

    The Empty Anchorage

    No trade ships at the Columbia

    by

    “the Ocian is imedeately in front and gives us an extensive view of it from Cape disapointment to Point addams,” reported William Clark on 15 November 1805. But he saw no ships at anchor. Nothing.

    Writing in Clover

    The vocabulary of Lewis and Clark

    by

    The spare vocabulary of the busy journalists was spiced here and there with the clichés and colorful sayings of the time. That vocabulary itself is another valued legacy of the 1804–1806 expedition.

    The Permanent Party

    by

    Between St. Louis and the Pacific Ocean, and on the return to St. Louis, personnel decisions needed to me be made.

    Jefferson’s Secrecy

    Lewis and Clark under cover

    by

    During the planning and preparations for the Western Expedition, Thomas Jefferson practiced selective levels of secrecy.

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Discover More

  • The Lewis and Clark Expedition: Day by Day by Gary E. Moulton (University of Nebraska Press, 2018). The story in prose, 14 May 1804–23 September 1806.
  • The Lewis and Clark Journals: An American Epic of Discovery (abridged) by Gary E. Moulton (University of Nebraska Press, 2003). Selected journal excerpts, 14 May 1804–23 September 1806.
  • The Lewis and Clark Journals. by Gary E. Moulton (University of Nebraska Press, 1983–2001). The complete story in 13 volumes.