James P. Ronda’s Lewis and Clark among the Indians (University of Nebraska Press, 1984) and many other works reveal his deep study of the Lewis and Clark Expedition. A productive writer, Dr. Ronda is the author of five full-length books, many scholarly papers and essays, and a frequent reviewer of books relating to western history. He was a popular and dedicated professor of history at Youngstown State University, Youngstown, Ohio.
Contributions
Lewis and Clark as Ethnographers
by James P. RondaAs ethnographers, the captains provided “names of the nations & their numbers” and recorded the strange cultures they encountered. Their work as ethnographers is examined here by James Ronda.
Two days after returning to St. Louis, its citizens celebrated the expedition’s return with a grand dinner and ball. Here are the eighteen toasts as reported in the Kentucky Western World.
The comments made by Ordway and Gass about Frazer selling his razor for two Spanish dollars can tell us much about the ethno-history of the Lewis and Clark Expedition and the native peoples of the Plateau.
The members of the expedition began their journey as a wild bunch of hard drinking, brawling, and insubordinate rowdies. By 7 April 1805, the day the Corps of Northwestern Discovery pulled out of Fort Mandan, Lewis described his men as enjoying “a most perfect harmony.”
Ignorant of plains politics, Lewis and Clark barely averted disaster in their encounter with Black Buffalo’s people—an article by James P. Ronda from a keynote address to the Lewis and Clark Trail Heritage Foundation, Pierre, South Dakota, August 2002.