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gif The ExpeditionFort Clatsop
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Differences
Lewis & Clark River
 

The Way It Was

he modern reconstruction of Fort Clatsop was conceived under the guidance of historian Carl P. Russell in the late 1950s. The most recent studies, based on meticulous research, suggest the following obvious differences, among others, between his conception and the original:

  • The replica faces south.
      The original may have faced east, toward the river.
  • The forest has been logged and groomed into a pleasant park.photo: Lewis & Clark River, linked to page about it
      In 1805 it was thickly covered with tall western hemlock, Sitka spruce, Douglas-fir, and some Western redcedar.
  • Paths are paved or covered with cedar chips.
      The Corps sloshed through mud outside the fort, but possibly laid plank walkways inside the parade enclosure.
  • The logs are Douglas-fir.
      The Corps used more readily available western hemlock and Sitka spruce.
  • The logs have been peeled, trimmed, and treated.
      The men did not take the time to peel the logs, and the mud daubing would have adhered better to the bark of unpeeled logs.
  • The low pickets have smoothly milled points.
      Back then the pickets may have been pointed by axe at the tops, and possibly were ten feet tall.
  • The fireplaces and chimneys are made of stones and mortar, and are set against the walls.
      Originally the materials would have been log cribs chinked with clay. Fire pits in the enlisted men's rooms would have been in the centers of the floors. "Chimneys" would have been plank or hide baffles, which would have deflected smoke toward an opening in the roof.
  • The wide, double main gate is hung on heavy metal hinges.
      The two gates in 1805 were each probably no more than four feet wide, and were hung on hand-made wooden hinges.
  • Doors and windows are framed, and gutters protect the doorways from rainwater.
      Those refinements wouldn't have been worth the men's time.
  • Neat shelves, smooth tables, and sturdy wooden floors (smoothed by 200,000 pairs of feet per year) suggest that Fort Clatsop was a convenient, homey place.
      The essential requirements were shelter from the rain, protection from potential enemies, and the maintenance of military order. With only a short-term occupancy in view, there was little need for the refinements they might have added to a permanent fort.

--Joseph Mussulman

Differences
Lewis & Clark River


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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)