8 Lewis & Clark
- A Nez Perce Man In 19th Century St. Louis
Why Did Warriors Go East?
A Nez Perce Man In 19th Century St. Louis
Local historian thinks he's found the answer to why four Nez Perce men traveled to St. Louis in the early 1800s.
By Adam Wilson
of the Tribune
- Diggers Discover Explorer' (Lewis & Clark) Latrine
Lewiston Morning Tribune
Associated Press
Monday, July 22, 2002
The concrete Tsceminicum sculpture at the confluence of the Snake and Clearwater rivers has been damaged by weather and vadalism since it was installed in 1980. The Lewiston Lewis-Clark Bicentennial Committee received a $30,000 grant Tuesday that will pay half the price of recasting the sculpture in bronze.
- Earth Mother's Future Looks Brighter
Lewiston Morning Tribune
by Heather Frye
October 2002
The concrete Tsceminicum sculpture at the confluence of the Snake and Clearwater rivers has been damaged by weather and vadalism since it was installed in 1980. The Lewiston Lewis-Clark Bicentennial Committee received a $30,000 grant Tuesday that will pay half the price of recasting the sculpture in bronze.
Lewiston Morning Tribune
by Eric Barker of the Tribune
June 27, 2002
The Salmon River below Hoover Ridge cuts its way through layers of basalt here where Deer Creek and Eagle Creek join the river. It is believe Sgt. John Ordway passed through this country nearly 200 years ago. Wapshila Ridge, which separates the Salmon river from the Snake River, is in the background.
- Hikers Discover Lewis & Clark Campsites
by Mary Aegertere
Avid Hiker Who Lives In Uniontown.
Lewiston Morning Tribune
- House Votes to Expand Lewis & Clark Memorial
Associated Press (July 2002)
Washington, D. C
The House Monday approved a bill to widen Oregon's Fort Clatsop National Memorial, where Lewis and Clark spent three months after reaching the Pacific Ocean.
- Lewis & Clark Designs (Posters)
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- Tribe Considers Sakakawea
(Sacagewea / Sacagawea / Sacajawea) Spelling
Lewiston Morning Tribune
Associated Press
BISMARCK, N.D. - The Three Affiliated Tribes may change the spelling of Sakakawea, the American Indian guide who accompanied explorers Meriweather Lewis and William Clark. She is known as Sacagawea in Idaho and elsewhere.
The Tribune ha spelled the woman's name Sacajawea, the same as the spelling used for a junior high school in Lewiston.