A friend of mine forwarded this to me. I feel its worth sharing. 200 years ago today - In several ways it resembled a classic government boondoggle. Cost overruns were over 100%, it started later and took longer than intended, and it failed in its primary purpose. But its shortcomings were more than matched by its accomplishments. On this date in 1804, the Corps of Discovery, led by Captains Meriwether Lewis and William Clark, shoved off from their camp at Wood River, Illinois and entered the mouth of the Missouri River. The explorers knew less about where they were going than the U.S. did about the moon before landing there. Yet, while the mission did not discover the fabled (and non-existent) Northwest Passage, it was a resounding success. The expedition described and named hundreds of plants and animals previously unknown to science (including, among others, the grizzly bear and pronghorn antelope.) It delineated the entire path of the Missouri River, and many of its tributaries. The Corps crossed the rugged Bitteroot Mountains, connected with the Columbia River, and followed that river to the Pacific Ocean. And it dealt fairly and honestly with the Native Americans, probably the last government mission of any sort to do so. All this was done with the loss of only one man, early in the journey - and his death (probably due to a burst appendix) would not have been preventable even had he been back in civilization, under the finest medical care available. So take a moment today to appreciate Lewis, Clark, Sacagawea, York, John Colter, George Drouillard, Pierre Cruzatte, Patrick Gass, and the rest of the participants in the most remarkable expedition in the history of our nation. |