Fort Osage Lewis and Clark Book Club to Discuss Fort Osage: from Clarence Stessman

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Fort Osage Lewis and Clark Book Club to Discuss Fort Osage: from Clarence Stessman On The Trail A local chapter of the Lewis & Clark Trail Heritage Foundation, Inc. January 2011 www.lewis-and-clark-kansas-city.org Lewis and Clark Trail Superintendent February 5th Visits Kansas City Dinner Program Mark Weekley, Dan Save the date and please send your Sturdevant, Pat Traffas check! and Ross Marshall An Excellent Dinner & Lewis and at the Indepedence, Clark Program, Saturday, February 5, Missouri, National Cascone's North. Frontier Trails Your check is your reservation. Please Museum. The occa- RSVP as soon as possible as we need to sion was the visit by have a head count by Tuesday, February National Park Service’s 1. Please mail your check for $30 per Mark Weekley to person to: Lewis and Clark Riverbend Kansas City to explore Chapter the Lewis and Clark 1220 Washington #301 sites in our area. Mark KCMO 64105 is the Superintendent Terry Hobbs and Ross Marshall pres- of the National ent On the Trail in Nez Perce Country, Park Service’s Lewis their 2010 Lewiston, Idaho, Lewis and Clark National and Clark Trail Heritage Foundation Historic Trail. More Program. information about the This was a terrific program in Idaho National Trail is found at: http://www.nps.gov/lecl/index.htm from July 31 through August 4, 2010. Also in the program is a report on planning for Sacagawea at Fort Osage Lewis and Clark Book Club to discuss Fort Osage: from Clarence Stessman. This event is for the April 23, 2011 Bicentennial Opening of the American West, March 28 Program! We’ll meet at the Cafe at Briarcliff Village, north of downtown on March 28 at 5:00 p.m. to discuss Fort Osage: Opening Of The American West, by Rhonda Program details: Wooldridge, published by Independence Press in Independence, Missouri, in 1983. * Cascone's Italian Restaurant, The Mid-Continent Library has 12 copies available as of this writing and is also 3737 North Oak Trafficway, Kansas available on Amazon.com. City North. 816.454.7977 We have invited the Native Sons and Daughters of Greater Kansas City to * Cash Bar at 5:00 p.m. (Bar is join us. In the early 1940s, the Native Sons were the primary civic organization that separate from the dinner). arranged for the construction of the replica Fort Osage which we now celebrate, * Review of personal photos and and the Native Sons continue their promotion of this national historic site. events from 2004 through 2010 With questions & discussion; all are welcome even if you haven’t read the book. * Dinner, $30 per person, 6:00 No reservations required. You may email Jil Brown at jbrown032001@comcast. p.m. Italian Food: order from choice net or call her at 816.331.8528 if you have questions. of two entrees, Chicken Limonata or The Cafe at Briarcliff Village is at 4125 N. Mulberry Drive, Kansas City North. Lasagna, plus a salad, and dessert and Their phone number is 816.505.5557. coffee or tea. Tip is included in the Directions to the Cafe: $30. • From downtown Kansas City, drive north on 169 Highway/Broadway exten- * Program 7:00 p.m. sion across the Broadway bridge. Contact Dan Sturdevant at dan@ • Exit at Briarcliff Parkway. sturdevantlawoffice.com. • Turn left at the bottom of the ramp and proceed under the highway. You may bring a spouse or friend(s) • Drive two blocks to Mulberry. who is not a member of the chapter, in • Turn right and up the hill to the Briarcliff Village Shops. fact we hope to recruit new members • Turn right into the shopping area. who you may wish to invite. Please re- • The Cafe is in the middle of the shops. serve the time now and send your check! On the Trail 1 President’s Note New Lewis And Clark Members, please reserve on your calendars now and then please come to our upcoming events: Saturday, February 5, Dinner and Program (see page 1), Monday, Observation Tower At March 28, Bookclub (see page 1), and especially, Saturday, April 23, Sacagawea at Camp Dubois Fort Osage (see page 4). JIM SUHR Associated Press Dan Sturdevant HARTFORD, Ill. - The harrow- ing trek of explorers Meriwether Lewis The Way To The Western Sea and William Clark across uncharted by David Lavender America two centuries ago took per- severance - as did construction of an University of Nebraska Press observation tower that overlooks the $18.95; Bison Book Paperback edition Mississippi and Missouri rivers and will ISBN 0-8032-8003-3 bear their names. Opened in May, a decade after the landmark was conceived, the 180-foot- Reviewed by Kyle Carroll tall building with twin towers gives Several years ago I read a book by author David visitors a panoramic gander at the spot Lavender called The Fist In The Wilderness.It was where the rivers meet and, to the south, good writing and accurate, so when I came across a view of the St. Louis skyline and its Lavender’s The Way To The Western Sea on Amazon. glistening Gateway Arch. com for a bargain price, I ordered it. I’m glad I did. The observation tower comple- It is the journey of Lewis and Clark from ments the nearby Lewis and Clark State Lavender’s perspective. It is a familiar story to many Historic Site commemorating Camp Lewis and Clark devotee’s but it is worth the read Dubois, where explorers who accom- for several reasons. Lavender’s background as a historian and his research of the fur panied Meriwether Lewis and William trade allows him to set the stage for the expedition’s epic journey in an enlighten- Clark were trained and equipped before ing, somewhat different way in context with the world–wide market for furs and sojourning west at President Thomas the impact that had on other countries interest in claiming the western part of the Jefferson’s behest. continent. Construction of the tower proved The book was first published in 1998, so he was writing, researching and form- almost as difficult as the exploration it ing his opinions prior to the bulk of Gary Moulton’s seminal work being available. commemorates: Work stuttered as orga- His handling of the journals is unique and interesting. For example, in the chapter nizers struggled to cobble together the Against the Flow, he writes about the explorers substitute salve they made when $5 million needed from local and state they ran out of what they had brought with them. sources. Frequently stormy, wet weather “they concocted another out of pine resin, bear oil, and–of all things–bees wax. (there didn’t help with the largely outdoor were no bees in the American West in those days. Clark, acting on impulse, had pur- project. chased this wax from a Tillamook Indian he met on his venture down the cost to buy “It was a long time coming,” said whale blubber. Originally it had been part of the cargo of a Spanish ship that had gone Bob Schwandner, the project’s super- aground and broken up on Nehalem beach. The Tillamook Indians dug chunks of the intendent for general contractor Jun stuff up for years.)” Construction. “The interest is pretty This book would be a good purchase for anyone, whether familiar with Lewis high, and I think it’ll be received well. and Clark or brand new to it’s appeal. Lavender’s style, breadth of knowledge and as It’ll be something I hope a lot of people always, the Lewis and Clark story make this book worth reading. enjoy.” continued on page 3 River Bend Chapter Membership Application Membership levels Name _____________________________________________ $5 Full-time student Mailing Address _____________________________________ $15 Individual City ________________________ State ______ Zip________ $25 Family Phone ___________________ Email____________________ $50 Non-profit organization $100 Corporation National Lewis & Clark Trail Heritage Foundation Member? Yes Additional donation of $ Signature __________________________________________ Total amount enclosed $ Return this with your membership payment, made payable to Missouri-Kansas River Bend Chapter, to: Missouri-Kansas River Bend Chapter 1220 Washington Street, Suite 301 Annual Dues Due in January Kansas City MO 64105 2 On the Trail continued from page 2 The tower includes entry-level murals that resemble a giant jigsaw puzzle with Board of Directors more than 2,200 tile pieces. The interior has a visitors’ center, and landscaping in- Chair cludes a fountain that shoots water from the middle of a huge, concrete compass. Dan Sturdevant An elevator in one tower takes visitors to the Kansas City, Missouri highest of three railed viewing decks. The other 816.421.4783 tower has stairs. The whole thing sits on a 4.5-acre dan@sturdevantlawoffice. stretch bisected by a bike trail and skirted by heavily com traveled Illinois Route 3. Hartford officials broke ground on the project in Vice Chair late 2002 and expected it to be completed by Dec. Steve Kaub 12, 2003, the bicentennial of the explorers’ ar- Blue Springs, Missouri rival at Camp Dubois (they later traveled along the 816.229.6211 Missouri River, across the Rocky Mountains and to [email protected] the Pacific Ocean). Delays forced planners to adjust their sights on Secretary christening it by late 2006, when a group of re-enac- Marty Kraemer tors retracing the original expedition’s two-year path Kansas City, Missouri were to complete their trip and return to southern 816.561.2811 Illinois. That opening didn’t happen, either. But now, the tower is open for business. See more Treasurer at http://host.madison.com/travel/regional Fred Sawin IF YOU GO St. Joseph, Missouri What: Lewis and Clark Confluence Tower has three observation decks accessible 816.232.4964 by either stairs or an elevator.
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