gif gif
gif
gif gif
gifgif
gifgif
gifgif
gifgif
gifgif
gifgif
gifgif
gifgif
gifgif
gifgif
gifgif
gif gif gif
gifgifHome
gif
gif gif gif
gifgifCredits
gif
gif gif gif
gifgifLinks
gif
gifgifgif
gifgifRSS News
gif
gifgifgif
gif gifShare
gif
gif gif gif
gifgifContact
gif
gifgif
gif gif
gif gif gif

 

gif
    Return to...
gif gif gif
gif The ExpeditionDiscovering Lewis & Clark from the Air
gif
32. Spirit Mound near Vermilli
34. Sandbars near Springfield,
 

33. Yankton, South Dakota

View west, upstream

Pass cursor over image to read details.

wark aerial

Peace Parley

he Corps moved eight and a half miles through this stretch of the Missouri on 27 August 1804. They went ashore on the south side of the river below Calumet Bluff just above the river's bend, near the left edge of the photo. Here they "formed a camp in a Butifull Plain," erected a flagpole, ran up their large flag, and settled in to wait for the Sioux, whom they had invited to meet with them. On the thirtieth, seventy-five Sioux men of the Yankton tribe, or E-hank-ton-wan, "People of the End Village," ceremoniously entered the expedition’s camp, eager to parley. They had managed to get along with the British and the Spanish and were ready to play ball with the Americans.

Lewis delivered a long speech, translated into Siouan by his recently hired interpreter and local envoy, Pierre Dorion, Sr., then distributed peace medals and sundry gifts, plus an American flag — a symbol of the nation that now owned the land of the Sioux. That night there was a war dance by firelight, with boastful harangues from some of the leading warriors. Early the next morning, the Yankton chiefs promised they'd make peace with the Otos and Missouris. Easily said.

The captains thought it went pretty well. On 1 September they set sail "under a gentle Breeze from the South" toward another band of the Sioux Nation, the Teton. In less than a month their romance with diplomatic success would turn sour.

There was no settlement here at the time, but by 1860 Yankton was on the western edge of white settlement on the Great Plains, and was named capital of the huge Dakota Territory a year later. On this part of the Missouri today, the river is essentially a chain of dam-created reservoirs. The one farthest downstream, visible just below the horizon, is Lewis and Clark Lake, the 25-mile-long impoundment of the Gavins Point Dam west of the city of Yankton.

From Discovering Lewis & Clark from the Air
Photography by Jim Wark
Reproduced by permission of Mountain Press.

32. Spirit Mound near Vermilli
34. Sandbars near Springfield,


gif

gif
gif
 
From Discovering Lewis & Clark ®, http://www.lewis-clark.org © 1998-2009 VIAs Inc.
© 2009 by The Lewis and Clark Fort Mandan Foundation, Washburn, North Dakota.
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)