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The ExpeditionFort Clatsop
Fort Clatsop Site, 1900
The Way It Was
 

Differences

he reconstruction of Fort Clatsop that now stands at or near the site of the Corps' winter encampment of 1805-06 was built on the same floor plan that Clark drew on the cover of the Elkskin-covered Journal. Assuming this was the plan that was actually followed, the rest of the present structure resembles the original only in a remote sense, and gives visitors an imperfect idea of what it was really like, for three basic reasons.

First, the present one was built to last for an indeterminate time; the original was a temporary structure for a residence of only about four months.

Second, the new one was built for the convenience and safety of large numbers of welcome visitors; the original was designed for limited access and for defense.

Third, professional carpenters carefully crafted the modern version over a period of two years, with power tools as well as hand tools, using the best available materials; 30 hungry and dispirited soldiers clad in shabby, wet leather, built their little fort with light hand tools, out of native materials within arm's reach, in 15 days.

--Joseph Mussulman

Fort Clatsop Site, 1900
The Way It Was


 
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From Discovering Lewis & Clark®, http://www.lewis-clark.org © 1998-2008 VIAs Inc.
Journal excerpts are from The Journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, edited by Gary E. Moulton
13 vols. (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1983–2001)