Lewis & Clark

  CONTENTS
 collapse sectionILLUSTRATIONS
 FIGURES
 MAPS
  [MAP]
 collapse sectionIntroduction
 NOTES

 collapse section1. Contexts
 collapse section1. Living with Lewis & Clark
 NOTES
 collapse section2. Wilderness Aesthetics
 NOTES
 collapse section3. “Two dozes of barks and opium”
 NOTES

 collapse section2. Legacies
 collapse section4. The Louisiana Purchase and  the Lewis & Clark Expedition
 NOTES
 collapse section5. “Twice-born” from the Waters
 FRAMING THE LEWIS AND CLARK ENCOUNTER
 DISEASE AND DEPENDENCE, 1837 TO 1886
 NEW WORLDS AND OLD WATERS, 1886 THROUGH THE 1940S
 SURVIVING THE ENGINEERED FLOOD, 1953 TO THE 1980S
 MAKING WORDS MATTER, 1984 TO 1992
 CLOSING THE CIRCLE
 NOTES
 collapse section6. George Shannon and C. S. Rafinesque
 NOTES

 collapse section3. Memories
 collapse section7. “We are not dealing  entirely with the past”
 NOTES
 collapse section8. Sacajawea, Meet Cogewea
 NOTES
 collapse section9. On the Trail
 NOTES

 collapse section4. New Perspectives
 collapse section10. Let's Play Lewis & Clark!
 “FOR THE PURPOSES OF COMMERCE”
 “TWO HUNDRED YEARS TO THE FUTURE”
 MILLENNIAL HISTORY
 MILLENNIAL NATURE
 RE-CREATION AND RECREATION
 PROBLEMS AND PROMISES
 NOTES
 collapse section11. On the Tourist Trail with Lewis & Clark
 PERSONAL DISCOVERIES
 PATRIOTISM AND SUSTAINABLE HEROES
 SACAGAWEA'S LEGACY AND WOMEN'S HISTORY
 CLEAN CAMPSITES AND THE ABSENCE OF ARCHAEOLOGY
 INTERPRETIVE CENTERS
 NEW INTERPRETATION ON THE WASHINGTON COAST
 SUPPORTING ROLES
 INDIAN VOICES
 CONTROVERSY AND THE DEATH OF CAPTAIN LEWIS
 ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS
 NOTES
 collapse section12. The Lewis & Clark Bicentennial
 collapse sectionTHE INFAMOUS BUSINESS TRIP
 Wish-low-too-latin (Raymond Burke), Umatilla Tribal Chairman
 NOTES

  Epilogue  “We proceeded on”
  CONTRIBUTORS
  INDEX

collapse section Collapse All | Expand All expand section