The Trail / Along the Northern Reach

Along the Northern Reach

North Dakota and Eastern Montana

The Missouri River’s northernmost reach crosses western North Dakota and eastern and central Montana. The region may be barren, but geological riches include the Fort Union Formation and the “seens of visionary inchantment” in the Upper Missouri River Breaks. After numerous encounters with grizzly bears, Clark reports “that the curiossity of our party is pretty well satisfied with rispect to this anamal.” A base camp is established at the mouth of the Marias, and they scout the two rivers for several days before deciding which branch to take.

    Synopsis Part 2

    Fort Mandan to the Marias River

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    Near the mouth of the Knife, in late October 1804, the expedition settled down for the winter. After the river ice broke up, the keelboat left for St. Louis and six new dugout canoes headed the opposite direction, up the Missouri river.

    The Fort Union Formation

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    Today it is a high and dry plain, but sixty million years ago it was a shallow saucer in the earth’s crust, filled with warm, steamy tropical jungles. That rich, dense vegetation would, over some millions of years, become a huge, complex deposit of lignite.

    April 20, 1805

    An Assiniboine grave

    Below present Williston, North Dakota, hard winds prevent the boats from making more than seven miles up the Missouri. Lewis walks on shore and observes a partially fallen Assiniboine scaffold grave.

    Mouth of the Yellowstone

    When Captain Lewis arrived at the mouth of the great river in late April 1805, he saw a “rich, delightful land, broken into valleys and meadows, and well supplied with wood and water.”

    Fort Union

    Upper Missouri developers

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    This is where, in 1828, John Jacob Astor’s American Fur Company built Fort Union, which remained the axis of Indian-American commerce on the Upper Missouri until the late 1860s.

    Culbertson, Montana

    Abundance

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    Somewhere in this vicinity, on 29 April 1805, Lewis shot his first grizzly bear and promptly began his detailed study of the fascinating species. Other game was astonishingly abundant, too.

    The Milk River

    The river which scolds all others?

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    Creeping down the nearly imperceptible slope of the northern high plains, this is the stream Lewis and Clark described as possessing a peculiar whiteness, being about the colour of a cup of tea with the admixture of a tablespoonfull of milk.

    Fort Peck Dam

    Varied landscape

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    “The countrey on the North Side of the Missouri is one of the handsomest plains we have yet Seen on the river,” Clark declared. Lewis described the ragged badlands on the south side as “high broken hills….”

    May 14, 1805

    Two close calls

    In present Eastern Montana, hunters take flight from a wounded grizzly and the white pirogue, steered by Toussaint Charbonneau, tips over. The captains call it a day and issue a ration of consoling grog.

    Charbonneau’s Prayer

    Accident in the white pirogue

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    Charbonneau’s ultimate test of faith came as a boatman, on a day when he was at the helm of the white pirogue. After a sudden gust of wind, he panicked and turned the boat sideways to the wind, turning the boat over.

    Fort Peck Lake

    Close calls

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    The fourteenth of May was a day of close calls. With no time to reload their weapons, the grizzly bear hunters flung them aside and leaped over a twenty-foot-high bank into the river.

    The Musselshell River

    Sharp curve

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    On 19 May 1805, the expedition camped on the east side of the neck, or “gouge,” in the Missouri River where the Musselshell River joins it. It had been an exhausting day.

    Charles M. Russell NWR

    Missouri Breaks

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    The wind against them again on 25 May 1805, the Corps had to tow their boats with ropes. Lewis observed, “the water run with great violence, and compelled us in some instances to double our force in order to get a perorogue or canoe by them.”

    Into the Breaks

    Fred Robinson Bridge to Judith Landing

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    In 1804-5-6 Lewis and Clark called all rough or relatively precipitous elevations, wherever they saw them, “broken” lands; the topography along this 149-mile stretch of the Wild and Scenic Missouri River was clearly the worst they had ever seen.

    Geology of the Breaks

    The geologic entries

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    As a professional geologist and a Lewis and Clark enthusiast I’m impressed by what the captains had to say about the geology of the Upper Missouri River Breaks, as suggested by the following journal excerpts and commentary.

    May 26, 1805

    Deserts of America

    While the men tow the boats through the Upper Missouri River Breaks, Lewis ascends the river hills and sees his first glimpse of the Rocky Mountains. Clark calls the breaks the “Deserts of America.”

    The Judith River

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    “at the distance of 2½ miles passed a handsome river which discharged itself on the Lard. side, I walked on shore and acended this river about a mile and a half in order to examine it”

    May 31, 1805

    Scenes of visionary enchantment

    The day brings endless “seens of visionary inchantment” as they struggle to move through the white cliffs area of the Upper Missouri River Breaks. They pass landmarks Citadel Rock and Grand Natural Wall.

    The Grand Natural Wall

    "walls of tolerable workmanship"

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    “As we passed on it seemed as if those seens of visionary inchantment would never have an end; for here it is too that nature presents to the view of the traveler vast ranges of walls of tolerable workmanship.”

    The White Cliffs

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    Under cloudy skies on the morning of 31 May 1805, the expedition “proceeded at an early hour,” and roped their flotilla of six cottonwood dugout canoes and two big pirogues into one of the most famous riverscapes on the Missouri.

    Citadel Rock

    "Steep black rock"

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    Clark remarked on this “high Steep black rock riseing from the waters edge” as they passed it on 31 May 1805, but he did not give it a name. Citadel Rock, so called during the steamboat era for its fortress-like presence, was an igneous intrusion into a layer of sandstone.

    The Teton River

    Clark's "Tanzy" and Lewis's "Rose"

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    Clark first called it the “Tanzey.” Apparently Lewis dubbed it Rose River, for he noted that “the wild rose which grows here in great abundance in the bottoms of all these rivers is now in full bloom, and adds not a little to the beauty of the cenery.”

    Decision Point

    Marias River decision

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    The two captains “strolled out to the top of the hights in the fork of these rivers,” from which they had “an extensive and most inchanting view.”

    The Marias River Observations

    2–10 June 1805

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    It was a clear night. The moon, just two days short of its first quarter, was 23° above the horizon bearing S78° W when the captains began their observations about 9:30 p.m.

    June 3, 1805

    Which river?

    When viewing the Missouri and swollen Marias River from Decision Point, everyone is confused as to which is the main river. To help the captains decide, scouts are sent up each river.

    June 4, 1805

    Decision Point explorations

    Not knowing which is the Missouri, the captains take small groups on scouting trips up the Marias and Missouri rivers. At the Decision Point base camp, Joseph Field barely escapes an attacking grizzly bear.

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.