Lewis and Clark: Meriwether Lewis and William Clark (FULL Audiobook)

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  • Опубліковано 28 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 260

  • @suzannesadowski7277
    @suzannesadowski7277 3 роки тому +34

    I'm grateful for the people who make these possible, they are not robots ,James Drury even took time to do one ,thank you to all these volunteers, I'm bedridden these books fill my time with alot of happiness 😊 🙂 ☺

  • @ejdiii333
    @ejdiii333 3 роки тому +36

    3 years later and I still rate this narration as top notch.

  • @cindymonk6994
    @cindymonk6994 2 роки тому +22

    The narrator does a great job at keeping the text fresh and engaging.

  • @heybusiness1
    @heybusiness1 3 роки тому +105

    I’d like to thank the narrator for not sounding like a robot. I don’t know why people are doing that these days. Keep up the good work my friend

    • @84CORVETTEBILL
      @84CORVETTEBILL 3 роки тому +15

      @Skydaddy Myth-Busters it’s not a robot for Librivox. It’s a volunteer reader effort. We never use automated readers. By the way, I’m a 18 year Reader Volunteer.

    • @handyvickers
      @handyvickers 3 роки тому +9

      Yeah, totally agree... It's also so much better when readers pause for commas and fullstops, and use inflection. No AI can replace a human who can add depth of feeling...

    • @johncole8792
      @johncole8792 2 роки тому +3

      He and David Wales are the best by far .

    • @handyvickers
      @handyvickers 2 роки тому

      @Skydaddy Myth-Busters I think it's pretty awful.... On the scale you provide, it's a 10.
      If the scale were reversed, it's a 1.

    • @adrianmungo3336
      @adrianmungo3336 2 роки тому

      7

  • @ChopinIsMyBestFriend
    @ChopinIsMyBestFriend 11 місяців тому +5

    Colonel John Lewis III is my grandfather! Many generations ago! Descending from John “The Immigrant” Lewis. He was married to Elizabeth Warner (Lewis). Who is daughter of Augustine Warner and Mildred Reade who is the 3rd great grandparents of George Washington who are also my 9th great grandparents.

  • @Shnoz16taylor
    @Shnoz16taylor 3 роки тому +38

    I'm very grateful for Lewis and Clark now. This is my first time listening to this. It has been put into perspective how much these 45 men suffered and endured for this country. Without them we wouldn't be able to have the American frontier that we have today. These guys were the definition of manly.

    • @vincentanguoni8938
      @vincentanguoni8938 3 роки тому +7

      They had guts...

    • @sjr7822
      @sjr7822 3 роки тому +7

      Hard to find 'manly men in my area, my worker didn't come to work because of loss of sleep worried about a snapping turtle near his doorstep- I kid you not. He believed someone put that turtle there to upset him. I'm glad I'm on my way out of this world!

    • @jkb1O5
      @jkb1O5 3 роки тому +4

      @@sjr7822 dude.... -& right

    • @robertferguson533
      @robertferguson533 3 роки тому +4

      @@sjr7822 I’m almost 67 so l know exactly what you mean

    • @jerrybrush3859
      @jerrybrush3859 3 роки тому +8

      Let’s also take the opportunity to remember Sacagawea. She along with this brave men played an important role in our country’s history.

  • @mikeyoung1363
    @mikeyoung1363 5 місяців тому +1

    I first read this book some 27 years ago. I was working in a dull finance job in London, England at the time. Such was my interest sparked, within a week of finishing the book I was hiking alone across Montana in the vicinity of the route Lewis and Clark took. Life changing experience and what wonderful people those rural Montana folks are.

    • @harvey2609
      @harvey2609 4 місяці тому

      I had a similar experience after reading The Happy Isles of Oceania by Paul Theroux. I also had a boring job working in the city of London on a trading floor. Anyway, back to the book. ✌🏽

  • @emilianozapata2530
    @emilianozapata2530 4 роки тому +13

    I am a Serbian living in Vietnam,but I carry my love for native american cultures where ever I go,and this right here made me happy.
    Thank you for sharing this!

    • @elvirredzepovic6898
      @elvirredzepovic6898 3 роки тому

      Pa odakle tamo da zavrsis :D

    • @emilianozapata2530
      @emilianozapata2530 3 роки тому

      @@elvirredzepovic6898 Posao da obidjem Aziju,i ostadoh u Vijetnamu,evo vec treca godina se nize.
      Sve najbolje o ovoj zemlji mogu da kazem...

    • @elvirredzepovic6898
      @elvirredzepovic6898 3 роки тому

      @@emilianozapata2530
      Znam bio sam drug, jedan od najgostoljubljivijih ljudi na planeti :)
      Pozdrav iz Stockholma ;)

    • @skinden1815
      @skinden1815 3 роки тому

      I can adopt you into a tribe?

    • @leonarddiiorio4337
      @leonarddiiorio4337 Рік тому

      A Serbian living in Vietnam who loves American culture.
      May you live long and comfortably.

  • @wendysalter
    @wendysalter 4 роки тому +9

    It's good to hear the real story and dispel the exaggerated and romantic myths that have led to misunderstanding and prejudice. Thanks for the sympathetic reading.

  • @philipcallicoat3147
    @philipcallicoat3147 2 роки тому +2

    One overall thing that stands out with this podcast... Those fellas were double tough...
    🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

  • @TERoss-jk9ny
    @TERoss-jk9ny Рік тому +1

    Lewis and Clark gave us America.
    America is over a cliff and there is NO coming back. Godspeed, all.

    • @veritas6335
      @veritas6335 Рік тому +1

      Of course there is. Deranged, corrupt con men psychopaths always self-destruct.

  • @cynthiamurillo1681
    @cynthiamurillo1681 2 місяці тому

    I love this book. I first read the book at the age of 12, I'm now 74 yrs. Old.

  • @nateyoungbeck5778
    @nateyoungbeck5778 8 років тому +90

    I'm following the Louis and Clark Trail with my family for the next few months (with a camper in tow, lol). This brings thorough understanding of the great journey, courage, and character of these people. Highly recommended

    • @trevorfuson715
      @trevorfuson715 7 років тому +10

      Nate Youngbeck that is great !! It's lots a fun . I hope you you had read aloud " THE JOURNALS OF LEWIS AND CLARK " or at least " UNDAUNTED COURAGE " along the way .It makes the trip come alive and makes you look at every little thing in perspective. I hope you enjoyed it. It would be fun to hit the ground and hike it if you could, wouldn't it ?

    • @mikelose2990
      @mikelose2990 4 роки тому +4

      COOL have a great journey
      Ha...

    • @daviddawson1718
      @daviddawson1718 3 роки тому +6

      I got to do just that, you will never forget this trip. You moght get a copy or audio of Undaunted Courage, or thr Lewis and Clark memoirs

    • @DIGITAL7Media
      @DIGITAL7Media 3 роки тому +3

      That sounds amazing and I hope you had a great time.

    • @eddieeclark314
      @eddieeclark314 3 роки тому +1

      Can I go ill help with the work I don't have any money but I do have a esepsually large penis I prefer women but am down for pleasing anyone

  • @pklemets
    @pklemets 4 роки тому +11

    A marvelous unbiased reading of the journals of Lewis & Clark without the encumbrances of provocative prevarications that are sowed into revisionist history.

    • @curiousone2940
      @curiousone2940 3 роки тому +2

      A rare thing today.

    • @veritas6335
      @veritas6335 Рік тому +2

      Sown, not sowed. And .... ""provocative prevarications?" Come on. Never use two silly words when one simple one will do, whatever riotous rambunctiously ridiculous reference you're making.

    • @pklemets
      @pklemets Рік тому +1

      @@veritas6335 So I nailed it.😂

    • @veritas6335
      @veritas6335 Рік тому +2

      Nailed nothing. You speak blather.

  • @theoldscout3478
    @theoldscout3478 Рік тому +2

    Thank You for a well done reading. It's not likely Lewis committed suicide. His tomb was refurbished in 1928 and his remains examined. His skull had a bullet hole in the back. He was shot twice, once in the chest and once in the head. He accomplished so much in his short life.

  • @yorkshiredreamer443
    @yorkshiredreamer443 2 роки тому +3

    Intresting insight into your early country.
    Fan from UK 🇬🇧

  • @dberry3733
    @dberry3733 Рік тому +1

    Fall asleep to this almost everynight. 😴

    • @nunyabiz-
      @nunyabiz- 4 місяці тому

      I also do that many nights 😴

  • @ejdiii333
    @ejdiii333 7 років тому +18

    A well made and spoken narration, thank you for reading this well, and very listenable, many livrevox I cannot listen to because the narration is horrible, robotic or in the wrong gender for the characters. This version is top notch. I will listen to often I am sure.

  • @christianp2001
    @christianp2001 5 років тому +8

    Just an FYI, this isn't the FULL audiobook. The full audiobook, such as you would get from Audible, is over 21 hours long. The abridged version is 4 hours 33 minutes. So I'm not sure which version this is.

  • @derekaduncan
    @derekaduncan 3 роки тому +4

    Wow, this is so revealing for every character in this Documentary.

  • @ducksinarowpatience
    @ducksinarowpatience 4 роки тому +15

    Thank you for this!

  • @visacard100
    @visacard100 6 років тому +41

    If you want a book you can't put down about the corps of discovery and more , read Sea to shinning Sea by James alexander Thome.

  • @sevenravens
    @sevenravens 6 років тому +31

    Undaunted Courage by Stephen Ambrose is a awesome book about this unparalleled expedition.

    • @daviddawson1718
      @daviddawson1718 4 роки тому +1

      It is my favorite. I also enjoyed the journals while I traced the trip in 04,05.

  • @johnandrews3547
    @johnandrews3547 4 роки тому +14

    MANIFEST DESTINY! God Bless America!

  • @mjohndenver
    @mjohndenver 3 роки тому +10

    Great reader, thanks.

  • @bethbartlett5692
    @bethbartlett5692 Рік тому +1

    *Listener FYI:* reference @ 53:30
    Council Bluffs, Iowa is across the Missouri from Omaha, Nebraska.
    (Calhoun, aka Fort Calhoun, Nebraska is just North of Omaha, and Council Bluffs, Iowa, also located on the Missouri River.)

  • @geraldweber1258
    @geraldweber1258 2 роки тому +2

    Visit the Sgt Floyd monument in Sioux City. Amazingly, the only life lost on the L & C expedition.

  • @rorytennes8576
    @rorytennes8576 4 роки тому +12

    Fascinating. !

  • @d.c.8828
    @d.c.8828 3 роки тому +3

    Great narration! Thanks!

  • @aprilpark7223
    @aprilpark7223 Рік тому +2

    I see that Lewis and Clark went down the Limhi River, but Google says Mormons named that river. The only problem is that Mormons didn’t exist in 1805.

  • @kenzeier2943
    @kenzeier2943 4 роки тому +7

    The writer had a wonderful style.

  • @acajudi100
    @acajudi100 4 роки тому +5

    I am a reader, and I love it, for I am a closet writer from age 15 to my present 78. I keep written, audio and video journals. Your suggestion cannot be deleted, like YT, Tweeter, Story corps,FB etc. If you are not part of the solution, you are part of the problem. You cannot delete the truth, and God is in charge 24/7, and your arms are too short to box with GOD!

    • @veritas6335
      @veritas6335 Рік тому +1

      If you wish to be a writer, you'll need to learn to avoid clichés.

  • @cynthiazeitner2098
    @cynthiazeitner2098 2 роки тому +2

    Excellent

  • @veritas6335
    @veritas6335 Рік тому +1

    This is interesting but the reading is confusing as it does not distinguish between the author's summary and commentary on the expedition when he wrote this in 1901 and the quotes he includes from the journals of Lewis and Clark themselves, written during the expedition itself between 1803 and 1805 or 1806. He should say "quote" when he reads an excerpt from the journals. Jumping back and forth in time doesn't work well if the listener cannot see the quotes used in the text that tell
    us who is speaking.

  • @guyinacoffeeshop2239
    @guyinacoffeeshop2239 4 роки тому +5

    Thank you

  • @emmaknight3890
    @emmaknight3890 4 роки тому +6

    EXCELLENT ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

  • @RabbitHorse777
    @RabbitHorse777 Місяць тому +1

    1:01:20 Chapter 5
    1:23:54 Chapter 6

  • @bethbartlett5692
    @bethbartlett5692 Рік тому +2

    🔹Excellent Narrator for this content.
    *These men accomplished a multitude of feats in a record amount of time.* A far greater value of focus could be realized from their having a "Billboard level of Profiling" in American History and the "Curriculum Education Model's" History Books, before "Mainstream Academics" call them a myth.
    *"Authentic Academics" follow the "Standards of Science and Research".*
    Beth Bartlett
    a Sociologist/Behavioralist
    and Historian
    Tennessee, USA

    • @veritas6335
      @veritas6335 Рік тому +1

      What? You might want to learn how to write a sentence that is intelligible or, indeed, even makes sense.

  • @mamiemonrovia7654
    @mamiemonrovia7654 3 роки тому +3

    in the very late '70s, I had the good fortune to see the museum located under the Arches at St Louis, a visit well worth the time. I also found it interesting to learn, 4 the 1st time, that Lewis was a former Gov. of LA., something I must have missed in my LA history class. Oh, the distractions of those dastardly boys again! LOL

    • @GH-oi2jf
      @GH-oi2jf 2 роки тому +1

      He meant the Louisiana Territory, not the state of Louisiana.

    • @mamiemonrovia7654
      @mamiemonrovia7654 2 роки тому

      @@GH-oi2jf my bad. little wonder I'd never heard that fun fact since I'm from the great state where we like 2 say, "Thank god 4 Mississippi" giggle

  • @bobelschlager6906
    @bobelschlager6906 4 роки тому +5

    very nice. Thank you,

  • @Audio-Books
    @Audio-Books  6 років тому +1

    SUPPORT OUR CHANNEL:
    - Try Audible and Get 2 Free Audiobooks:
    amzn.to/2OZUTib (Affiliate Link)
    - Buy in our store: www.amazon.com/shop/fullaudiobooksforeveryone (Affiliate Link)
    (Full audio books for everyone earns money off of the above links.)

  • @vincentho3964
    @vincentho3964 4 роки тому +4

    Another book to read is "Undaunted Courage " by Stephen E AMBROSE.

  • @UNLIMITEDVISA
    @UNLIMITEDVISA 3 роки тому +1

    1.50
    Thank you for this book

  • @maxinewest1326
    @maxinewest1326 3 роки тому +1

    Great historical picture of landscape and boats.

  • @samuelbasye3508
    @samuelbasye3508 6 місяців тому

    The reader sounds like he may have gotten into a bottle of Paul Masson. The storytelling is outstanding

  • @karolmolina1949
    @karolmolina1949 8 років тому +7

    I have a asingment about william clark and this helped a lot so I passed the test

    • @trevorfuson715
      @trevorfuson715 7 років тому +4

      Karol Molina you really need to make yourself learn how to read and learn from what you have read .I struggled in college because I hated it. My mind would go other places while my eyes were actually reading the lines but it wasn't sticking in my mind. Every book is not going to be on audio . So,if you do not learn to comprehend what you read you will never get through college.Its a bitch but that's why they call it learning. You probably know this so use ya noggin. Good luck !!!!

    • @kluafoz
      @kluafoz 7 років тому +4

      Trevor Fuson geezus it's fucking UA-cam comments. if yall wanted to be life mentors sign up at your local boys and girls club!!

    • @Justinarmstrong0089
      @Justinarmstrong0089 5 років тому +1

      This is the only type of platform that will let these kind of ppl give their "professional" opinion !! Lol.. No higher place of learning would dare.. UA-cam makes ppl feel special.. God bless em! Ergo.. My professional opinion...lmao

    • @daviddawson1718
      @daviddawson1718 4 роки тому +1

      You fuckin disgrace, read a goddamn book

    • @robertferguson533
      @robertferguson533 3 роки тому

      @@Bigger-Than-Jesus Are

  • @oakridgeboy2023
    @oakridgeboy2023 3 роки тому +1

    Awesome wish I was there

  • @JMDinOKC
    @JMDinOKC 2 роки тому +1

    It WASN'T a wilderness. People had been living in the lands Lewis and Clark "discovered" for thousands of years. And white Americans, Canadians and Europeans had been traversing the rivers and lands for decades if not centuries. Lewis and Clark were the first to make a SYSTEMATIC survey of the territory they explored.

    • @GH-oi2jf
      @GH-oi2jf 2 роки тому +1

      Lewis and Clark didn’t claim to have “discovered” the territory. They set out to explore and document it.

    • @veritas6335
      @veritas6335 Рік тому +1

      It most certainly was a wilderness. No roads, no buildings, no plumbing, no settlements. Land, rivers, trees, animals, mountains, sun, moon and stars. And that's all. Unchanged from time immemorial. That native Americans roamed there does not make it any less a wilderness.

    • @veritas6335
      @veritas6335 Рік тому +1

      Of course it's a wilderness and great parts of it still are. If you don't think so I suggest you have a go at crossing the continental divide on foot with nothing but a horse and the food you can carry.

  • @horsemumbler1
    @horsemumbler1 4 роки тому +2

    17:30 Chapter 2

  • @tiamatxvxianash9202
    @tiamatxvxianash9202 4 роки тому +3

    The word "Epic" does not do this audiobook enough justice.

  • @hubcityhotrod
    @hubcityhotrod 4 роки тому +13

    pirogue boat (pronounced 'Pea - row' a french canoe. Just saying.

  • @H7Auction
    @H7Auction Рік тому

    1:52:49 chapter 8

  • @benridge6570
    @benridge6570 3 роки тому +2

    I would like to believe people of that time were straight forward, and admire honor. Perhaps this is a romantic point of view, but it is still one that I prefer. Seems like those values have slipped away from us. They are exceptions. Seems like there's too few

    • @johndef5075
      @johndef5075 3 роки тому

      Yeah. Whites really valued the native Americans😂

  • @launiesoult3248
    @launiesoult3248 5 місяців тому

    I have followed Lewis and Clark go away from Pittsburgh Pennsylvania to Seattle or Astoria Washington across the mountains I didn't get my car I didn't do it by foot but we're both but nonetheless I did it

  • @BillyBoggle
    @BillyBoggle 2 роки тому +1

    Written in 1901** just wanna remind everyone

    • @BillyBoggle
      @BillyBoggle 2 роки тому

      For worser or worser 😅😳

  • @seriouslyyoujest1771
    @seriouslyyoujest1771 3 роки тому +1

    I’m glad those involved were rewarded. To think of America in our nations stage of settling, and discovery.

    • @veritas6335
      @veritas6335 Рік тому +1

      Rewarded? They nearly died of frostbite, dysentery and starvation. One did die of peritonitis. Sacajawea was only a teenager and died of typhus a few years later, in her twenties. And Lewis shot himself in 1809, three years after they got back. He was 35.

  • @jdjones7855
    @jdjones7855 4 роки тому +3

    I really like this guys voice for this reading 1:27:53 slightly demonic though but also a good listen

  • @thervers2140
    @thervers2140 3 роки тому

    God bless them.

  • @dalecole5315
    @dalecole5315 4 роки тому +5

    I was amazade the research was so lacking! Such an amaturest rendering. I was atonished that there were not a mention of the Canadian (David Thomson) that worked for both Fur trading companys, Born in the 1700 (Brittish) and studied as a cartographer. President Jefferson had aquired maps made by 'Thomason' and supplied them to Lewis and Clark. Thomas was known as the "Star Gazer' and riducled by the local people. he made a number of trips South while it was still French territory. Also mapped many Canadian rivers. You can easily Google the name ( David Thomson) and see how Lewis and Clark depended on those maps!

    • @mikebailey9566
      @mikebailey9566 4 роки тому +2

      Thompson is the correct spelling.

    • @oakridgeboy2023
      @oakridgeboy2023 3 роки тому

      Pie hole

    • @veritas6335
      @veritas6335 Рік тому +1

      Speaking of research, you might want to learn to spell before getting on your soapbox. Start by proofreading what you write, if you even want to appear halfway intelligent.

    • @Tosca-p6h
      @Tosca-p6h 21 день тому

      Spelling is offer rated.​@@veritas6335

  • @jesseserna8424
    @jesseserna8424 5 років тому +3

    This is a great Audio book I listened to the one by Stephen Ambrose and other titles by him,..racist is not good at all in any place but at these times it's history true not fair but in all my reading its a higher power,God, or something brought us together for a purpose to learn and be thankful to God in my opinion who knew the future of us.From those of us who are thankful to be here we now can try to understand,educate and again learn and avoid this from repeating itself,no matter what religion you are try to be peaceful and accept other people from other cultures and nationalities,it's really a smaller world than most of us think.Everyday try to learn something new,you might discover something interesting not just out here but on the inside about yourself...

    • @craigleppla9342
      @craigleppla9342 4 роки тому +1

      jesse serna that’s really good

    • @ghostlyimageoffear6210
      @ghostlyimageoffear6210 4 роки тому +1

      Why should we accept people of different cultures and religions? Diversity is a great weakness, breeds division, isolation and contempt. Only western whites are brainwashed into believing this is good. Most other peoples view it as opportunity to gain and exploit from our tolerance and benevolence, not to reciprocate--not like they have something of equal value to offer.

  • @EssiRoseG
    @EssiRoseG 7 років тому +5

    I was looking for the song

    • @killintime8431
      @killintime8431 3 роки тому

      Sing sing a song

    • @patmac6356
      @patmac6356 3 роки тому

      About to play "world of tanks' when this popped up.

  • @veritas6335
    @veritas6335 Рік тому +1

    What's with this guy who insists on mangling the pronunciation of a pirogue? It's NOT a "perio."

  • @jasperbooth6383
    @jasperbooth6383 2 роки тому

    Sounds like the storyteller fallout series guy. Hell yeah

  • @lisabeth61lk
    @lisabeth61lk Рік тому

    Really good. Gentlemen needs to go pro.

  • @AndrewGrey22
    @AndrewGrey22 2 роки тому

    1:52:39

  • @kevinpoole4323
    @kevinpoole4323 2 роки тому

    God's Blessings the Columbia River I want to See it in Person My Self

  • @Pandagamingandfriends138
    @Pandagamingandfriends138 2 роки тому

    My ancestor is William Clark

  • @LearnwithJanice
    @LearnwithJanice 3 роки тому +1

    Hi from Kansas USA

  • @shawnburnham1
    @shawnburnham1 3 роки тому +1

    11:00

  • @jesslyn4919
    @jesslyn4919 4 роки тому +1

    #AwarenessConsciousness ✌

  • @cunderw12
    @cunderw12 Рік тому +1

    So there was no whites west of Missouri? Only Native American tribes?

    • @veritas6335
      @veritas6335 Рік тому +3

      French trappers had worked the area since the 1700s. (Sacagawea was kidnapped at age 12 and sold to a French trapper, who "married" her. She was pregnant when on the expedition ) But other than the French trappers, there were few white people or settlements in the Northwest Territories There were Spanish missionaries and Spanish settlers in Texas and California of course.

    • @veritas6335
      @veritas6335 Рік тому +2

      The Spanish had sent settlers to what is now New Mexico and Arizona from the 1500s on. Santa Fe, New Mexico, was founded in 1609 by conquistador Pedro de Peralta. Franciscan friar Junipero Serra started the first Spanish mission in California in 1769, and many more followed. Many of them still exist and are wonderful to see. French explorers the Verendryes brothers arrived in the Dakotas in the 1730s (and claimed the area for France!). The fur trade opened up after that and French fur traders moved across all the northern territories. So yes, there were "whites" west of Missouri. Contrary to the opinion of many Americans, the French and the Spanish are white people.

  • @patrickpilch2352
    @patrickpilch2352 2 роки тому +1

    Slow and clear

  • @jeffwebster402
    @jeffwebster402 4 роки тому +4

    Bland, sleep-inducing narration. I couldn't survive 10 minutes.

  • @cbx500cbx
    @cbx500cbx 3 роки тому +1

    A good history but needs a little life sounds like its being read for first and last time

  • @duaneayers6117
    @duaneayers6117 4 роки тому +4

    It's sad that books and films as this one only want to pick out bits an parts of their journey when there were even more amazing discoveries long before any human known what was on the other of the Ohio River. So look up the town on the banks of the Ohio River named Clarksville, Indiana 🛡

    • @janetbosley6140
      @janetbosley6140 4 роки тому +3

      Yes liberal writers chopped out their Christian Faith, and this is what Liberal writers have done to all America's Christian History, the Christian founders . America has a Godly Heritage. Historian Willian Federer has the truth ofAmerica's Godly Heritage from the original Documents and Papers.

  • @a.g.hustlegarland4197
    @a.g.hustlegarland4197 2 роки тому +1

    I remember meeting lewis and Clark in the Missouri river in my boat gambling days

    • @veritas6335
      @veritas6335 Рік тому +1

      Not only not funny - that silly crack doesn't even make sense.

  • @earledmond36
    @earledmond36 3 роки тому

    Where’s York..

  • @jasonhutter7534
    @jasonhutter7534 3 роки тому +2

    All this time I thought Lewis and Clark were a rock and roll band

    • @sinatra222
      @sinatra222 2 роки тому +1

      Nah, that's Simon and Clarkfunkel

  • @NandiniSharma-o7r
    @NandiniSharma-o7r 2 місяці тому

    Taylor Timothy Taylor Michael Lopez Edward

  • @crosseyedgeorge4329
    @crosseyedgeorge4329 Рік тому

    If you have ADHD start at 29:21

  • @shaneowen4177
    @shaneowen4177 2 роки тому

    2.00

  • @MaryLee-r2v
    @MaryLee-r2v Місяць тому

    Thomas Mary Moore Susan Perez Ronald

  • @deedixon81
    @deedixon81 Рік тому

    hi queen

  • @sandyfreyman3501
    @sandyfreyman3501 3 роки тому

    I heard one of these men had some kind of mental issues towards the end. Too bad.

    • @veritas6335
      @veritas6335 Рік тому +2

      Lewis developed (or possibly always had) bipolar disease and shot himself in 1809, at age 35.

  • @RASK1904
    @RASK1904 6 років тому +1

    feels bad...

  • @ForrestWest
    @ForrestWest 2 роки тому

    For their 1st trade with the Indians it was 2 quarts of liquor for 2 deer. Selling drugs to the Indians lol, things never improved.

  • @larrymacdonald4241
    @larrymacdonald4241 2 роки тому

    LMAO..... they NEVER could have done this journey, without the pregnant native women who led them across the nation...

    • @GH-oi2jf
      @GH-oi2jf 2 роки тому

      Sacagawea was certainly important, but no one knows how the expedition would have gone without her.

    • @veritas6335
      @veritas6335 Рік тому

      Well, they would have done it. But with a lot more trouble.

  • @Angelkid190
    @Angelkid190 6 років тому

    This William Clark carries the same last name of my Dad's. William was also a slaveholder so I'm sure he could be my Dad's ancestry slaveholder.

    • @davidbrotheridge10
      @davidbrotheridge10 4 роки тому +1

      And what

    • @bernadinemadison6382
      @bernadinemadison6382 3 роки тому

      I figured he owned slaves, which was not mentioned.

    • @curiousone2940
      @curiousone2940 3 роки тому +1

      So?

    • @veritas6335
      @veritas6335 Рік тому +1

      Possible of course but not probable. There were 562,629 people with the last name Clark in the 2010 census. Why don't you research your family origins and places of birth and a census from that period? America took its first census in 1790.

  • @BarbaraGonzalez-l4v
    @BarbaraGonzalez-l4v 2 місяці тому

    White Shirley Lee Steven Davis Mary

  • @davidasher8718
    @davidasher8718 Рік тому

    American Indians, the Cleveland browns of civilizations

    • @veritas6335
      @veritas6335 Рік тому +1

      What does that mean?

    • @davidasher8718
      @davidasher8718 Рік тому

      @@veritas6335 that means if you were to replay history 100,000 times it would have the same result every time

  • @cindycressler1239
    @cindycressler1239 3 роки тому

    Y

  • @susansmith1703
    @susansmith1703 4 роки тому

    ...

  • @mrmaje1
    @mrmaje1 5 років тому +3

    This blokes voice is not good for this

  • @toponeroc
    @toponeroc 21 день тому

    What a disgusting book

  • @mikerosy6924
    @mikerosy6924 3 роки тому

    Hey “social influence folk…”…. Ya… ya…

  • @pattersonparkin7303
    @pattersonparkin7303 2 роки тому

    Good story but he does sound like a robot

  • @1XX1
    @1XX1 2 роки тому

    Not too down to earth writing. Too sugary. Nothing is that perfect. The writers head seems up in the clouds. Irritating.

    • @veritas6335
      @veritas6335 Рік тому +1

      Sugary? Starvation, frostbite, death and disease are "sugary?" Eating your horses is "sugary?" Read further. And by the way, this is an abridged version of the original journals, published in 1901 from the original journals written during the expedition itself. Writing styles were different then.

  • @dn2ze
    @dn2ze 5 років тому +2

    They would of got lost if it wasn’t for a Native woman... hahahahaha

    • @dn2ze
      @dn2ze 5 років тому

      Tom Bystander you forgot, it’s immigrants getting lead by real locals. What’s your excuse on that?!? Hahahahaha seriously stopped making excuses makes you look dumb.

    • @dn2ze
      @dn2ze 5 років тому +1

      Tom Bystander You’re just upset both of these white guys was lead by a Native woman.... hahahahaha

    • @GH-oi2jf
      @GH-oi2jf 5 років тому +3

      dante bigguy - No question she was an important asset, but I don’t get why you think it funny.

    • @hansenpch
      @hansenpch 4 роки тому +3

      Lewis and Clark met Sacagwea, a Lemi Shoshone woman, at the Mandan Village where they spent the 1803 winter. Sacagwea was kidnapped by Hidasta Indians who lived near the Mandan villages. At age 13, she was a sold or won in gambling game by a French fur trader named Charbonneau. Lewis and Clark hired him for $500 as a guide hoping Sacagwea could retrace her footsteps back to the Idaho-Montana border (about 900 miles). There she met her brother and continued on with the expedition. Afterwards, she visited Clark in St. Louis, Missouri and left her son with Clark as a guardian for overseeing his education.

  • @kerloz5097
    @kerloz5097 3 роки тому

    The nifty appliance hisologically jog because drop aerobically wail by a reflective nut. absorbing, nappy bugle

  • @ThomasWBaldwin
    @ThomasWBaldwin 2 роки тому

    jew