词条 | Lewis, Meriwether |
释义 | Lewis, Meriwether American explorer born Aug. 18, 1774, near Charlottesville, Va. 【U.S.】 died Oct. 11, 1809, near Nashville, Tenn., U.S. ![]() Born to William Lewis and Lucy Meriwether, Meriwether Lewis grew up on Locust Hill, the family's plantation in Ivy Creek, Va.—near Monticello, home of the future U.S. president Thomas Jefferson (Jefferson, Thomas). Lewis's father died while serving in the Continental Army in 1779. His mother then married John Marks and relocated her family to Georgia before being widowed again by 1792. Returning to Virginia, Lewis began managing Locust Hill under his uncle's supervision. He joined the Virginia militia in 1794 to suppress the Whiskey Rebellion in Pennsylvania. The following year he enlisted in the army at the time of the Northwest Indian War against Miami Chief Little Turtle and served for a brief time in William Clark's Chosen Rifle Company. Lewis's military career advanced rapidly from ensign (1795) to lieutenant (1799) to captain (1800), and he served as an army recruiter and paymaster. In 1801 President Jefferson asked Lewis to be his personal secretary and aide-de-camp. In 1803 Jefferson appointed Lewis commander of an expedition to explore the American territory newly acquired in the Louisiana Purchase. His considerable frontier skills, military service, physical endurance, intellectual prowess, and literary skills made him an excellent choice. Lewis traveled to Philadelphia to study astronomy, botany, zoology, and medicine with some of the country's brightest scientists and doctors. He also began making preparations, recruiting men, and purchasing equipment, boats, and supplies for the expedition. When Jefferson informed Lewis of the numerous commercial, scientific, and diplomatic purposes of the venture, Captain Lewis invited his good friend Clark to co-command the expedition. Although Clark was officially a lieutenant and second in command because the U.S. secretary of war refused him the same status as Lewis, the expedition leaders referred to each other as “captain” to mask this bureaucratic distinction. ![]() ![]() Lewis authorized the construction of Fort Madison on the Mississippi River and Fort Osage on the Missouri River. His attention was also demanded by the Osage Indians, who protested treaties and whose land had been encroached upon by emigrant tribes such as the Cherokee. Lewis faced additional pressures from his superiors regarding his infrequent correspondence and his handling of land claims, mining disputes, unlicensed traders, intertribal warfare, and the delayed return of Mandan Chief Sheheke (who had traveled with Lewis to Washington, D.C.) to his village. Secretary of War William Eustis refused to honour some of Lewis's expense vouchers, which destroyed Lewis's credit and sullied his reputation. Nonetheless, Lewis had been successful in publishing territorial laws, supporting St. Louis's inaugural newspaper, and establishing the first Masonic (Freemasonry) lodge in Missouri. In 1809 Lewis, age 35, embarked for Washington, D.C., to explain his public expenditures and to clear his name. Leaving the Mississippi River at Chickasaw Bluffs (Memphis, Tenn.), he set out along the Natchez Trace (Natchez Trace Parkway), stopping for the evening at Grinder's Stand near present-day Hohenwald, Tenn., about 70 mi (110 km) from Nashville. There on October 11 Lewis died a violent and mysterious death from gunshot wounds to the head and chest; the circumstances have fueled a long-standing debate over whether his death was a suicide or murder. Many scholars believe Lewis took his own life as a result of depression, alcohol abuse, or failing to marry or to publish. Others assert that thieves, opportunists, or political opponents murdered him. Another explanation suggests it may have been accidental. In 1848 Tennessee erected a grave-site marker that in 1925 became the Meriwether Lewis National Monument. See also Lewis and Clark Expedition. Additional Reading Stephen E. Ambrose, Undaunted Courage: Meriwether Lewis, Thomas Jefferson, and the Opening of the American West (1996, reissued 2003), focuses on Lewis's role in the expedition. Richard H. Dillon, Meriwether Lewis: A Biography (1965, reissued 2003), is reliable but lacks footnotes. John D.W. Guice (ed.), By His Own Hand? The Mysterious Death of Meriwether Lewis (2006), examines whether Lewis's death resulted from suicide, homicide, or accident. |
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