Indian Interactions
In reading about the first-hand reactions and interactions that Merriweather Lewis had with the Shoshone Indians, one can glean what Lewis and his men thought about the Indians, how they reacted to them and how they perceived them. It is widely known and perceived that the Europeans vastly mistreated and subjugated the Indians and this really did start with Columbus. Even so, the totality of the interactions and back/forth between the Europeans and the Indians was by no means monolithic and solely violent and the details about how the groups perceived each other upon their initial meeting and thereafter is useful to see. While the more violent and sordid parts of the story of the Indians and the European is important, any other details or facets that can be looked at are important as well.
Analysis
Lewis had about fifty men that were with him. While the instructions from Thomas Jefferson and the guidelines for evaluating the documents are important, the bread and butter, so to speak, when it comes to assessing these documents are the entries themselves. As one example, a journal entry in mid-August of 1805 notes that Lewis felt that the Shoshone were very "detached" when it came to the way that they spoke and communicated with the white people that were there. Lewis was quick to attribute...
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