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Lewis and Clark National Historical Park
The Corps of Discovery's arrival to the Pacific coast in N...
Woodrow Wilson Boyhood Home
Although he is generally associated with Prin...
Columbia Gorge Discovery Center
Traveling down the unfamiliar waters of the Columbia River...
Woodrow Wilson Birthplace
Thomas Woodrow Wilson, 28th president of the Uni...
Lewis & Clark Interpretive Center at Cape Disappointment State Park
In the fall of 1805, after navigating their canoes through...
Nez Perce National Historical Park Visitors Center
On September 12, 1805, Lewis and Clark began crossing the ...
Sacajawea Interpretive and Cultural Center
After months of arduous travel, the Corps of Discovery rea...
Lolo Pass Visitor Center
While driving along scenic U.S. Highway 12 over Lolo Pass,...
Pompeys Pillar National Monument
The Lewis and Clark Trail has almost no physical evidence ...
Fort Mandan and the Lewis and Clark Interpretive Center
Lewis & Clark’s Corps of Discovery spent the win...
Results for L
Lewis and Clark National Historical Park
The Corps of Discovery's arrival to the Pacific coast in November 1805 was an astonishing feat. Even so, the thirty-three members of the Corps were not finished with their journey. They still needed to get back home and winter was ...
Woodrow Wilson Boyhood Home
Although he is generally associated with Princeton University and the governorship of New Jersey prior to becoming President of the United States, Thomas Woodrow Wilson was born in Virginia and spent 13 childhood years in Augusta, Georgia. The son ...
Columbia Gorge Discovery Center
Traveling down the unfamiliar waters of the Columbia River, Captain William Clark and his expedition luckily escaped misfortune. After a wild trip through the Narrows, on October 26, 1805, Clark wrote, “all our articles we have exposed to the Sun ...
Woodrow Wilson Birthplace
Thomas Woodrow Wilson, 28th president of the United States, was born in this Greek Revival manse in 1856. Built in 1846 to house the pastors of Staunton's First Presbyterian Church, the manse's second occupants were Dr. and Mrs. Joseph ...
Lewis & Clark Interpretive Center at Cape Disappointment State Park
In the fall of 1805, after navigating their canoes through weeks of cold rain and fog, the Corps of Discovery reached the mouth of the Columbia River.
The entry William Clark jotted down in the notebook, which he kept ready ...
Nez Perce National Historical Park Visitors Center
On September 12, 1805, Lewis and Clark began crossing the Bitterroot Mountains using the Lolo Trail, but severe snowstorms slowed the expedition’s progress. Clark separated from Lewis on September 18, and finished crossing the Bitterroots two days later. Once over ...
Sacajawea Interpretive and Cultural Center
After months of arduous travel, the Corps of Discovery reached the Columbia River at the site of today’s Sacajawea Historical State Park on October 16, 1805. Here, at the confluence of the Columbia and Snake rivers, the Corps camped near ...
Lolo Pass Visitor Center
While driving along scenic U.S. Highway 12 over Lolo Pass, travelers are encouraged to admire the stretch of mountains between the Montana and Idaho state border. These mountains have historic value to the Nez Perce Indians, who used the Lolo ...
Pompeys Pillar National Monument
The Lewis and Clark Trail has almost no physical evidence from the expedition of the Corps of Discovery. However, Pompeys Pillar National Monument, near Billings, Montana, bears a famous signature from one member of the Corps of Discovery.
In July ...
Fort Mandan and the Lewis and Clark Interpretive Center
Lewis & Clark’s Corps of Discovery spent the winter of 1804 – 1805 in Fort Mandan, an encampment they built along the Missouri River that they named after the people of the Mandan Nation. This was an important time for ...