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Fort Peck in Valley County, Montana — The American West (Mountains)
 

Lewis & Clark in Missouri River Country

The Country is as Yesterday Beautiful in the Extreme

 
 
Left panel: Great Quantities of Every Species of Game Common Here image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Barry Swackhamer, February 1, 2011
1. Left panel: Great Quantities of Every Species of Game Common Here
Inscription. The Overlook Kiosk displays three panels: left, center, and right.

(plaque on the left:)

Great Quantities of Every Species of Game Common Here

The primary purpose of the Lewis and Clark expedition was to find a Northwest passage from the interior of the continent to the Pacific Ocean so that beaver pelts and other valuable furs could be shipped directly to the Orient via the Columbia River. Although an all water passage was never found, vast numbers of beaver and other wildlife were recorded in northeastern Montana. As they passed through this area, Lewis and Clark noted game so abundant that they could scarcely cast their eyes in any direction without receiving deer, elk, buffalo or antelope.
Many of these species no longer exist on the plains. Audubon sheep have become extinct. Buffalo now live in protected herds while other wildlife like grizzly bears, wolves and moose have been pushed to the mountains. Today, thanks to the reintroduction of elk and bighorn sheep along the Missouri River and around Fort Peck Lake, we can enjoy more of the same species that so amazed Lewis and Clark on their journey through
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"We saw a great number of buffaloe, Elk, common and Black taled deer, goats, beaver and wolves... We can send out at any time and obtain whatever species of meat the country affords in as large quantity as we wish..." Captain M. Lewis, Wednesday, May 8, 1805

"we scarcely see a gang of buffaloe without observing a parsel of those faithful shepherds (wolves) on their skirts in readiness to take care of the famed & wounded." Captain M. Lewis, Sunday, May 5 1805

"we also saw this evening emence quantities of timber cut by the beaver which appeared to have been done the preceeding year, in place particularly they had cut all the timber down for three acres..." Captain M. Lewis, Thursday, May 9, 1805

(centre panel:)
The Country is as Yesterday Beautiful in the Extreme

From the notations in their journals, it is obvious that Lewis and Clark were explorers in the truest sense. They not only documented landmarks and activities, they also kept highly detailed entries in their journals describing the natural world around them. Noting even the slightest variations in everything from sediment to vegetation
Left-side of the Center Panel image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Barry Swackhamer, February 1, 2011
2. Left-side of the Center Panel
to wildlife species, they left us with a remarkable appreciation of the richness and complexity of this land in northeastern Montana. Following the footsteps of Lewis and Clark through northeastern Montana, today's traveler will find the quality and character of this land hasn't changed much since the expedition pass through. Today you can experience this area with much the same awe as they did, Scan the horizon and enjoy panoramic views of wide, open plains. Watch as herds of antelope race the wind across the prairies, listen to meadowlarks chirping out their wake-up call and feel air so fresh it revitalizes the soul.

First Whitemen This Far West
It was believed that only one whiteman had ever ascended the Missouri River as far as the partly had come and he had turned back only several miles beyond the Yellowstone River. The expedition was entering completely uncharted wilderness at this point.

First Grizzly Bear Killed
"about 8 A. M. we fell in with two brown or〈yellow) bear; both of which we wounded; one of them made his escape, the other after my firing on him pursued me seventy or eighty yards,
Right-side of Center Panel image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Barry Swackhamer, February 1, 2011
3. Right-side of Center Panel
...we again repeated our fir and killed him.,,,it is asstonishing to see the wounds they will bear before they can be put to death.
Captain M. Lewis, Monday April 29, 1805

Biggest Elk Killed
"I walked on shore this evening and killed a black Elk...it appeared to me to be the largest I had ever seem...found it five feet three inches from point of hoof to the top of the shoulders..." Captain M. Lewis, Tuesday April 30, 1805

First Moose Sighting
A moose was first encountered about 10 miles above the mouth of the Bg Dry River. This subspecies of moose known as "Alces acles shiasi" has no scientific standing prior to the Lewis and Clark expedition.
"Several of the party went out to hunt...they Saw Several moose deer which was much larger than the common deer and the first we have seen." Sergeant John Ordway, May 10 1805

Caving Banks of the Missouri
"Set out this morning at an early hour, the courant strong; and the very crooked; the banks are falling in very fast; I sometimes wonder the sone of our canoes or peroques are not swallowed up by means of these immence masses of earth which
Right Panel: <b>Sacagawea: Equal in Fortitude as any Member of the Party </b> image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Barry Swackhamer, February 1, 2011
4. Right Panel: Sacagawea: Equal in Fortitude as any Member of the Party
are eternally precipitating themselves into the river,..." Captain M. Lewis, May 11, 1805

The Prairie Rattler
While at present-day Timber Cove, the party saw a new species of Rattlesnake never before recorded by white men, the Prairie Rattler (Crotalus viridian)
"Capt. Clark narrowly escaped being bitten by a rattlesnake in the coarse of his walk, the party killed one this evening at our encampment, which he informed me was similar to that he had seen; this snake is smaller than those common to the middle Atlantic States, being about 2 feet six inches long..."
Captain M. Lewis, Friday, May 17, 1805

First Glimpse of the Little Rocky Mountains
"I walked on Shore with two men we killed a (brown) white or grey bear;...after killing the bear I continued my walk alone...I ascended the highest hill I could See from the top of which I Saw the mouth of M. Shell R. & the meanderings of the Missouri for a long distance. I also Saw a high mountain in a westerly direction, bearing S. S W. about 40 or 50 miles distant..." Captain W. Clark, Sunday May 14, 1805

Captain Lewis, The Observant Naturalist
Lewis & Clark in Missouri River Country Marker image. Click for full size.
Photographed by Barry Swackhamer, February 1, 2011
5. Lewis & Clark in Missouri River Country Marker

"the Burrowing Squirrel...never visit the brooks or river for water; I am astonished how this animal exists as it does without water, particularly in a country like this where there is scarcely any rain during 3/4 of the year and more rarely any due (dew); yet we have sometimes found their villages at the distance of five or six miles from any water...." Captain M. Lewis Thursday, May 23, 1805

Big Sky Country
"the air is so pure in this open country that mountains and other elivated objects appear much nearer than they really are; these mountains (present day Little Rocky Mountains) do not appear to be further than 15 m. we sent a man up this creek (present day Rock Creek) to explore the country he returned late in the evening and informed that he had proceeded ten miles directly toward these mountains and that he did not think himself by any means half way..." Captain M. Lewis, Friday May 24, 1805

(panel on there right:)
Sacagawea: Equal in Fortitude as any Member of the Party

She was only 17 years old, a mother and a Shoshone Indian. Sacagawea joined the expedition at Fort Mandan with her husband,
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Toussaint Charbonneau and their infant son.
Although Charbonneau was hired as an interpreter, only one role was intended for his wife: by reuniting Sacagawea with her people around the headwaters of the Missouri in south-central Montana, Lewis and Clark hoped to obtain badly-needed horses to cross the mountains on their way west to the Pacific Ocean.
Yet Sacagawea's contributions to the expedition fare exceeded her original role. Her knowledge of native plants and interpretation of Indian signs and customs served the explorers well. Most importantly, she was instrumental in preventing a premature end to the expedition. When a boat overturned, she single-handedly retrieved articles from the water that were indispensable for the success of the expedition. This earned her the respect and status equal to any member of the Lewis and Clark expedition, recognition rarely enjoyed by women, let alone native Americans, in the early 1800's.

Sacagawea River: A Fitting Namesake
"...about five miles abe (NB: above) the mouth of shell (Musselshell) river a handsome river of about fifty yards in width discharged itself into the shell river on the Stard, or upper side; this stream we called Sβb-cβ-gar ,e-βh (NB: Saw ca gah we a) or bird woman's River. after our interpreter the Snake woman." Captain M. Lewis, Monday, May 28, 1805

"It happened unfortunately for us this evening that Charbono was at the helm of this Perogue,... in this perogue were embarked, our papers, Instruments, books medicine, a great part of our merchandize and in short almost every article indispensibly necessary to...insure success of the enterprize...the Perogue was under sail when a sudon squawl of wind struck her obliquely, and instantly upset the perogue... Captain M. Lewis, Tuesday, May 14, 1805

" ...the Indian woman to whom I ascribe equal fortitude and resolution, with any person onboard at the time of the accedent, caught and preserved most of the light articles which were washed overboard" Captain M. Lewis, Tuesday, May 16, 1805
 
Erected by Army Corp of Engineers, Travel Montana, Dept. of Commerce, Montana's Missouri River Country, Galsgow Chamber of Commerce.
 
Topics and series. This historical marker is listed in these topic lists: ExplorationLandmarksNatural Features. In addition, it is included in the Lewis & Clark Expedition series list. A significant historical date for this entry is April 29, 1805.
 
Location. 48° 0.59′ N, 106° 23.409′ W. Marker is in Fort Peck, Montana, in Valley County. It is on State Highway 24 near Yager Road, on the right when traveling east. The marker is located at a Fort Peck Lake Overlook. Touch for map. Marker is at or near this postal address: 5473 Montana Highway 24, Fort Peck MT 59223, United States of America. Touch for directions.

Regionally, this marker is in Montana’s Missouri River Country. It is also in the American Mountain West, in the Lewis & Clark Corridor, on the prairies, on the Great Plains, and specifically on the Northern Plains. Globally, it is in North America, the Western Hemisphere, the Western World, and the Anglosphere. Historically, it finds itself in what was once Rupert’s Land and also the Louisiana Purchase.

Other nearby markers. At least 8 other markers are within 2 miles of this marker, measured as the crow flies: Peculiar White Water Named the Milk River (within shouting distance of this marker); Summits of High Hills Were Covered with Pine (within shouting distance of this marker); With No Running Water the Stream was called Big Dry River (within shouting distance of this marker); The Slide of '38 (approx. half a mile away); Fort Peck Dam (approx. half a mile away); Built with Muscle and Muck (approx. half a mile away); In Memory (approx. half a mile away); Boomtowns on the Outskirts (approx. 1½ miles away). Touch for a list and map of all markers in Fort Peck.
 
 
Credits. This page was last revised on July 25, 2024. It was originally submitted on July 25, 2024, by Barry Swackhamer of Brentwood, California. This page has been viewed 216 times since then and 23 times this year. Photos:   1, 2, 3, 4, 5. submitted on July 25, 2024, by Barry Swackhamer of Brentwood, California.
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Jul. 18, 2026