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An Illustrated Expedition of North America:
Bodmer and Maximilian in the American West
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In 1832 naturalist Prince Alexander Philipp Maximilian (1782-1867), ruler
of the small state of Neuwied, Prussia [now in Germany], conducted one of
the earliest expeditions to the American West to record the natural history of
the region.
Accompanying him were Swiss-born artist Karl Bodmer, who produced numerous
drawings
illustrating their travels, and David Dreidoppel, Maximilian's servant and a
skilled hunter-taxidermist.
Although Maximilian and Bodmer were not the first to explore the American West
and record their observations, they were the first team combining a trained,
dedicated scientist with an especially skilled illustrator, whose collaboration
resulted in a work of unique historical, scientific, and aesthetic importance.
Researchers are fortunate that Special Collections owns a German edition of
Maximilian's narrative of the two-year
expedition,
Reise in das innere Nord-America in den jahren 1832 bis 1834
(
Travels in the Interior of North America 1832 to 1834
).
This account was published in Paris by subscription from 1839-41 and
was accompanied by a map of the travel route and by an atlas of eighty-one
black and white etchings engraved by Bodmer. Today, there are fewer than
twenty known editions of Maximilian's work in the United States.
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A naturalist, ethnographer, and explorer, Maximilian enjoyed learning about
natural
history early in his life. He studied with Johann Friedrich Blumenbach
(1752-1840),
a German professor, known as the father of physical anthropology, who proposed
one
of the earliest classifications of the races of mankind. Because his professor
encouraged his interest in natural history, Maximilian first traveled to Brazil
from 1815-1817 to study the flora, fauna, and people of the land. He had the
opportunity to work with two German scholars who were conducting research in
Brazil.
During the expedition, Maximilian kept notes on his travels, which he later
published as
Reise nach Brasilien in den jahren 1815 bis 1817
(
Travels in Brazil
in the Years 1815, 1816, 1817
). It was this publication that earned him respect
as a naturalist.
Tableau 8.
WAHK-TA-GE-LI, A SIOUX WARRIOR.
Fort Lookout, South Dakota, below Fort Pierre.
Prompted by the success of the Brazil trip, Maximilian desired to lead an
expedition
to the American West. His reason for the journey, as stated in the preface to
his
book, was to provide foreigners with a description of the natural scenery of
North America
and of the cultures of the indigenous inhabitants, a project he thought the
United States
government had neglected. Although there had been earlier scientific
expeditions, none, in
his opinion, had supplied adequate portrayals of either subjects. For this
expedition,
Maximilian hired an artist to accompany him, instead of relying on his own
sketches.
At the age of forty-nine, Maximilian set out with Swiss artist Karl Bodmer and
hunter-taxidermist
David Dreidoppel to learn about the Native American people and their culture.
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Karl Bodmer was born in Zurich, Switzerland in 1809. His uncle Johann Jacob
Meier,
a local engraver and watercolorist, trained him in art. In January of 1832,
while
traveling in Germany and contributing engravings of Rhineland to several
albums,
Bodmer met Maximilian, who was searching for a draftsman to accompany him to
North America.
Thus began a two-year journey during which Bodmer performed his job superbly
and experienced
many adventures as well. He painted portraits of famous Indian chiefs in
their natural
settings as well as many landscapes when the entourage stopped sometimes rather
unexpectedly
due to snags along the river route.
Tableau 1. FOREST SCENE ON THE LEHIGH.
Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.
On one unfortunate occasion, he was lost on the prairie
near Fort Clark for several hours. Another time his paints and oils solidified
due to the
cold winter weather. A young and patient man, Bodmer withstood the trials of
the trip,
and at its conclusion, he returned to France and completed eighty-one plates
from the original
400 watercolors. Some plates were made to accompany Maximilian's account of
the expedition,
while others were sold on a subscription basis. In 1836, Bodmer exhibited many
of his plates
at the Paris Salon. During the 1850s and 1860s, he won awards for his work;
Bodmer continued
to paint landscape and animal subjects until his death in 1893 at the age of
eighty-four.
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In the atlas accompanying
Travels in the Interior of North America
, the images are
aquatints. An aquatint is an engraving produced by a process of etching in
which
spaces are bitten in with aqua fortis, or nitric acid, to create an effect
resembling
a drawing in India ink or watercolors.
Tableau 5.
MOUTH OF FOX RIVER.
Near New Harmony, Indiana
Over a period of nine years (1834-43), many engravers and printers assisted
Bodmer
with the production of these plates. They generated five editions of Bodmer's
etchings,
colored or uncolored, on at least three different stocks of paper, including
titles
of plates in German, French or English. In all, thirty-three plates were
designed
as vignettes to preface chapters of the German text for Maximilian's account of
the journey; forty-eight
folio-size tableaux were issued separately.
After the printing of these editions, Bodmer returned most of the printing
plates
to Maximilian. During the Franco-Prussian War the Royal Secretary kept them
at the Prussian Legation. At the end of the war the plates were returned to
Neuwied. In 1959, the New York art firm of M. Knoedler and Company purchased
the plates as well as Maximilian's journals and notes, which they later lent
to the Joslyn Art Museum in Omaha, Nebraska, for an exhibit in 1961. The
Northern Natural Gas Company of Omaha bought the collection from Knoedler and
eventually donated the collection to the Joslyn Art Museum in 1986.
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Travels in the Interior of North America
is Special Collections' most
significant record of the culture and daily lives of the original human
inhabitants of North America. As Maximilian, Bodmer, and Dreidoppel traveled
westward across the continent, they met many of these indigenous peoples,
including the Omaha, Sioux, Assiniboin, Piekann, Mandan, and Minatarre Indians.
The scanned photographic reproductions of a select number of Bodmer's images
represent landscapes and people Maximilian's team encountered at different
points along the expedition route. Follow the expedition team's route shown
in red on the map titled
Map to Illustrate the Route of Prince Maximilian of
Wied in the Interior of North America from Boston to the Upper Missouri in
1832, 33 & 34.
Arriving in Boston, Massachusetts, on July 4, 1832, the Maximilian entourage
proceeded to New York City and Philadelphia, then westward by stagecoach to
Bethlehem, Pennsylvania. From Pittsburgh, they sailed by steamboat on the
Ohio River past Cincinnati, Ohio, and Louisville, Kentucky, to Mt. Vernon,
Indiana.
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The expedition trekked north to New Harmony, Indiana, on the Wabash River where
they
met the French artist-naturalist, Charles Alexandre Leseur, and the American
entomologist, Thomas Say, and then to St. Louis, Missouri, where they made
the acquaintance of retired explorer, William Clark.
In April of 1833, they set sail on the Yellow-Stone, a steamboat owned by
the American Fur Company, up the Missouri River to Bellevue, Nebraska,
and Fort Pierre, South Dakota, and from there to Fort Union near the North
Dakota-Montana border. At various points along the route, they disembarked
at trading posts, owned by the fur company, which allowed them to observe
and interact with indigenous people. In July, they continued upriver to
Fort McKenzie, Montana, at the mouth of the Marias River.
Setting forth on their return trip during the fall-winter of 1833-34, the
explorers started downriver to Fort Clark, north of what is now Bismarck, North
Dakota; and by April they had landed in St. Louis. Heading eastward, they took
an alternate route via the Great Lakes to Buffalo and Albany, New York. On
July 16, 1834, they boarded ship in New York and, by the second week in August,
landed in Le Havre, France, ending a remarkable two-year odyssey.
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Tableau 16. MIH-TUTTA-HANGKUSCH. A MANDAN VILLAGE.
Fort Clark, North Dakota (above Bismarck).
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Today, most of us would agree that all of Maximilian's journey was an
adventure,
starting with the 48-day trip from Europe to America. Always at the mercy of
the
weather, the sail-powered ship was frequently subjected to violent storms, then
becalmed by windless days. The ship's passengers risked drowning or depleting
their food and water supplies before reaching port. Maximilian, however,
discounts the dangers by stating:
"Voyages to North
America are become everyday occurrences, and little more is to be related of
them
than that you met and saluted ships, had fine or stormy weather, and the
like..."
Since Maximilian's stated purpose was to observe and record the indigenous
human
inhabitants and the natural landscape of the West of the interior of North
America,
the bulk of his writing describes the sojourn he and the artist Karl Bodmer
(and
Maximilian's servant and hunter, Dreidoppel) made up the Missouri River to Fort
McKenzie and back. Because of the hazards to be encountered on the Missouri
River
and in Indian territory, Maximilian was advised to travel by steamboat under
the
aegis of the American Fur Company, which guaranteed the only relatively safe
passage into primitive territory. Therefore, on April 10,1832, Maximilian,
Bodmer,
and Dreidoppel departed St. Louis, Missouri, on board the steamboat,
Yellow-Stone,
owned by the fur company.
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Tableau 26. WINTER VILLAGE OF THE MINATARRES.
Fort Clark, North Dakota (above Bismarck).
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All along the Missouri River, they faced constant adversity. Low water and
snags
necessitated frequent unloading and reloading of the boat's cargo. Violent
storms
and strong currents drove the boat ashore and damaged it, as did a fire on
board.
Supplies were lost overboard; chickens in cages drowned.
"The flames rose from the forest to height of 100 feet--fiery smoke filled the
air: it was a splendid sight!"
Many of Maximilian's
botanical and zoological specimens were ruined by the water. In fact, he
discovered
that some of the boat's crew members were tossing his collections overboard.
And
finally, collections that he shipped home, uninsured, via steamboat were lost
in
an onboard fire.
When the team stopped at a military post, Fort Leavenworth (then named
Cantonment
Leavenworth), Kansas, most of the brandy which they needed to preserve
specimens
was seized. Not long after, Maximilian narrowly missed stepping on a
rattlesnake.
During Maximilian's stay at Fort McKenzie, Montana, he witnessed, at close
range,
an Indian battle. That experience combined with reports of other hostilities
in
the area prohibited his intended travel to the Rocky Mountains.
Tableau 9.
DACOTA WOMAN AND ASSINIBOIN GIRL.
Fort Pierre, South Dakota, and Fort Union, North Dakota.
On their return trip to St. Louis, Maximilian and company stayed at Fort Clark
from November 1833 to April 1834. As Maximilian recounts, he and the other
inhabitants of the fort endured extreme hardships. The roof of their living
quarters leaked, the moisture threatening to ruin their notes, specimens, and
drawings. As their food and other provisions ran low, they were prevented from
adequately restocking the larder due to the extreme cold and heavy snow. Worst
of all, their health was seriously jeopardized.
On the 11th of March I felt the first symptoms of an indisposition, which daily
increased, and soon obliged me to take to my bed. It began with a swelling in
one knee, and soon extended to the whole leg, which assumed the colour of dark,
extravasated blood. A violent fever succeeded, with great weakness, and,
having neither medical advice nor suitable remedies, my situation daily became
more helpless and distressing, as there was nobody who had any knowledge of
this disorder. The other inhabitants of the fort were likewise indisposed, and
our provisions were very bad and scanty....
... At the beginning of April I was still in a hopeless condition, and so very
ill, that the people who visited me did not think that my life would be
prolonged beyond three or, at the most, four days. The cook of the fort...one
day expressed his opinion that my illness must be the scurvy, for he had once
witnessed the great mortality among the garrison of the fort at Council Bluffs,
when several hundred soldiers were carried off in a short time...He said that
the symptoms were in both cases nearly similar; that, on that occasion, at the
beginning of spring, they had gathered the green herbs in the prairie,
especially the small white flowering Allium reticulatum, with which they had
soon cured the sick. I was advised to make trial of this recipe, and the
Indian children accordingly furnished me with an abundance of this plant and
its bulbs: these were cut up small, like spinage, and I ate a quantity of them.
On the fourth day the swelling of my leg had considerably subsided, and I
gained strength daily.
In the course of their two-year sojourn in the New World, they experienced many
adventures. They witnessed a great, spontaneous prairie fire:
"The flames rose
from the forest to height of 100 feet--fiery smoke filled the air: it was a
splendid sight!"
They were able to view magnificent wild animals from a unique
perspective, as Maximilian recounts an incident from September of 1833:
As we were rapidly carried down by the current, in a turn of the river,
we suddenly saw a herd of at least 150 buffaloes, quite near to us, standing
on a sand bank in the river. The bulls, bellowing, drove the cows along;
many were in motion, and some standing and drinking. It was a most interesting
scene. My people laid aside their oars, and let the boat glide noiselessly
along
within a short rifle-shot of the herd, which took no notice of us, doubtless
taking our boat for a mass of drifting timber...The great number of wild
animals, buffaloes, elks, bighorns, and antelopes, which we saw on this day,
afforded us much entertainment. We checked, on this occasion, our sporting
propensities, that we might be able better to observe those interesting
animals,
in which we perfectly succeeded.
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Maximilian's Works
Wied-Newied, Maximilian Alexander Philipp, prinz von.
Reise in das innere Nord-America
in den jahren 1832 bis 1834
. 2 volumes. 70 plates. Coblenz, 1839-41.
NAL Call No. 125 M45 (Special Collections)
Wied-Newied, Maximilian Alexander Philipp, prinz von.
Reise nach Brasilien in den jahren
1815 bis 1817
. Frankfurt, 1820.
NAL Call No. 125 M45R (Special Collections)
Wied-Newied, Maximilian Alexander Philipp, prinz von.
Travels in Brazil in the years
1815, 1816, 1817
. Part 1. London, 1820.
NAL Call No. 125 M45T (Special Collections)
Other Sources about Maximilian and Bodmer
Bodmer's America: Karl Bodmer's Illustrations to Prince Maximilian of
Wied Neuwied's Travels in the Interior of North America 1832-1834
.
London, England: Joslyn Art Museum and Alecto Editions Limited, 1991
NAL Call No. to be assigned (Special Collections)
McKelvey, Susan Delano.
Botanical Exploration of the Trans-Mississippi
West 1790-1850
. Jamaica Plain, MA: Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University, 1955.
NAL Call No. 452.6 M19 (Special Collections)
Thwaites, Reuben Gold.
Early Western Travels 1748-1846
. Cleveland, Ohio:
The Arthur H. Clark Company, 1906.
NAL Call No. 125 T42 (Special Collections)
Joslyn Art Museum
,
Omaha, NE
Kenyon College Olin Art Gallery
, Gambier, OH
Limited Edition Graphics
, London, England
Museum of Nebraska Art
, Kearney, NE
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During the 1700 and 1800's, European explorers and scientists were drawn to the
New World by the reports of exotic native people and unusual plants and
animals.
Fortunately, some of the explorers kept journals, which provide us with first
hand accounts of the relatively unspoiled wilderness of young America and
which
include descriptions of indigenous flora and fauna and geographic features
and,
also, depictions of the cultures of the original human inhabitants. There
are a number of noteworthy accounts within Special Collections and the general
collection of the National Agricultural Library.
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Bullock, William, fl. 1808-1828
Bullock, William.
Six months’ residence and travels in Mexico: containing remarks on the present
state of New Spain, its natural productions, state of society, manufactures,
trade, agriculture, and antiquities, &c
. London: John Murray, 1824.
NAL Call No. 125 B873 R (Special Collections)
Flint, James (1779-1855)
Flint, James.
Recollections of the last ten years, passed in occasional residences and
journeyings in the valley of the Mississippi
. New York: Da Cupo Press, 1968.
NAL Call No. F353 F6 1968 (General Collection)
Franchere, Gabriel (1786-1863)
Franchere, Gabriel.
Narrative of a voyage to the northwest coast of America in the years 1811,
1812, 1813, and 1814, or: The first American settlement on the Pacific
. New York: Redfield ..., 1854.
NAL Call No. 125 F84 R (Special Collections)
Gregg, Josiah (1806-1850)
Gregg, Josiah.
The commerce of the prairies
. New York, Citadel Press, [c1968].
NAL Call No. F800 G7 1968 (General Collection)
Harris, Thaddeus Mason (1768-1842)
Harris, Thaddeus Mason.
The journal of a tour into the territory northwest of the Alleghany mountains,
made in the spring of the year 1803. With a geographical and historical
account of the state of Ohio...By Thaddeus Mason Harris...
(In Thwaites, Reuben G.
Early western travels 1748-1846
. Cleveland, Ohio, 1904. v. 3 (1904) p. 307, fold map).
NAL Call No. 125 T42 v.3 (General Collection)
Lewis, Meriwether (1774-1809) & Clark William (1770-1838)
Burroughs, Raymond Darwin, ed.
The natural history of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, with a new introduction
by Robert Carriker
. East Lansing: Michigan State University Press, 1995.
NAL Call No. QL155 N38 1995 (General Collection)
Cutright, Paul Russell.
Lewis and Clark Pioneering naturalists
. Urbana: Univ. of Illinois Press, 1969.
NAL Call No. F592.4 C8 1969 (General Collection)
Lewis, Meriwether.
History of the expedition under the command of Lewis and Clark, to the sources
of the Missouri River, thence across the Rocky Mountains and down the Columbia
River to the Pacific Ocean, performed during the years 1804-5-6, by order of
the government of the United States. A new ed., faithfully reprinted from the
only authorized ed. Of 1814, with copious critical commentary, prepared upon
examination of unpublished official archives and many other sources of
information, including a diligent study of the original manuscript journals and
field notebooks of the explorers, together with a new biographical and
bibliographical introduction, new maps...and a complete index, by Elliott
Coues...
New York: F. P. Harper, 1893.
NAL Call No. 125 L58 (Special Collections)
Lewis Meriwether, and Clark, William.
History of the expedition under the command of Captains Lewis and Clark to the
sources of the Missouri, across the Rocky mountains, down the Columbia river to
the Pacific, in 1804-6; a reprint of the edition of 1814 to which all the
members of the expedition contributed.
N. Y., 1902.
NAL Call No. 125 L58 (General Collection)
Lewis Meriwether.
History of the expedition under the command of Captains Lewis and Clark to the
sources of the Missouri, thence across the Rocky mountains, down the Columbia
river to the Pacific Ocean, performed during the years 1804-5-6, by order of
the government of the the United States. A complete reprint of the Biddle ed.
of 1814 to which all the members of the expedition contributed, with an account
of the Louisiana purchase, by Rev. John Bach McMaster and notes upon the
route...
New York: Allerton Book Co., 1922.
NAL Call No. 125 L58 (General Collection)
Lewis Meriwether.
Original journals of the Lewis and Clark expedition, 1804-1806. Printed from
the original manuscripts in the library of the American philosophical society
and by direction of its committee on historical documents, together with
manuscript material of Lewis and Clark from other sources, including
note-books, letters, maps, etc., and the journals of Charles Floyd and Joseph
Whitehouse. Now for the first time published in full, and exactly as written.
Ed., with introduction, notes, and index, by Reuben Gold Thwaites...
New York: Dodd, Mead & Company, 1904-05.
NAL Call No. 125 L58 (General Collection)
Meehan, Thomas.
The plants of Lewis and Clark's expedition across the continent, 1804-1806
.
Philadelphia: Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia,1898.
NAL Call No. 455.8 M47P (General Collection)
United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service.
Lewis and Clark across the Lolo Trail : Clearwater National Forest, Lolo
National Forest
. [Washington, D.C.? : Forest Service, Dept. of Agriculture,1992?].
NAL Call No. aSD428 C5L4 1992 (General Collection - Brochure)
United States Department of Agriculture Forest Service.
Lewis and Clark expedition : Lemhi County, Idaho
. [Washington, D.C.?] : USDA Forest Service : Bureau of Land Management :
River of No Return Interpretive Association, [1998].
NAL Call No. aF752 L4L48 1998 (General Collection - Brochure)
Wheeler, Olin Dunbar. T
he trail of Lewis and Clark, 1804-1904 : a story of the great exploration
across the continent in 1804-06 : with a description of the old trail, based
upon actual travel over it, and of the changes found a century later
. New York : Putnam, 1904.
NAL Call No. 125 W56 (General Collection)
Michaux, André (1746-1802)
MacPhail, Ian.
Andre & Francois - Andre Michaux.
Lisle, Ill.: The Morton Arboretum, 1981.
NAL Call No. Z5352 M3 (General Collection)
Michaux, André.
Flora boreali-americans, sistens caracteres plantarum quas in America
Septenrionali collegit et detexit Andreas Michaux...
Parisiis et Argentorati, apud fratres Levrault, anno XI – 1803.
NAL Call No. 454 M58F (Special Collections)
Michaux, André.
Flora boreali-americans, sistens caracteres plantarum quas in America
Septenrionali collegit et detexit Andreas Michaux...
Editio nova ... Parisiis, Bibliopola Journaux junior, 1820.
NAL Call No. 454 M58F 1820 (Special Collections)
Michaux, André.
Herbarium Michaux
[microform]. Zug, Switzerland: Inter-Documentation Co., [1968].
NAL Call No. Fiche 178
Michaux, André.
Journal, 1787-1796; with an introduction and notes by C. S. Sargent
. Text in French.
Proceedings American Philosophical Society
, v.26, no. 129.
NAL Call No. 454 M58J (General Collection)
Michaux, André.
Journal of André Michaux, 1793-1796
. (In Thwaites, Reuben G.
Early western travels 1748-1846
. Cleveland, Ohio, 1904. v. 3 (1904) p. 25-104) Translated from original
French, appearing in
American Philosophical Society Proceedings
, 1889, pp. 31-101, 114-140.
NAL Call No. 125 T42 v.3 (General Collection)
Savage, Henry.
Andre and Francois Andre Michaux.
Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1986.
NAL Call No. QK31 M45S28 (General Collection)
MacPhail, Ian.
Andre & Francois - Andre Michaux.
Lisle, Ill.: The Morton Arboretum, 1981.
NAL Call No. Z5352 M3 (General Collection)
Michaux, Francois André. H
istoire des arbres forestiers de l’Amérique Septentrionale, considérés
principalement sous les rapports de leur usages dans las arts et de leur
introduction dans le commerce ...
Paris, Impr. De L. Haussmann at d’Hautel, 1810-13.
NAL Call No. 454 M582H (Special Collections)
Michaux, Francois André.
The North American sylva, or A description of the forest trees of the United
States, Canada, and Nova Scotia ... to which is added a description of the most
useful of the European forest trees...
Tr. from the French of F. Andrew Michaux ... Paris, Printed by C. D’Hautel,
1819.
NAL Call No. 454 M582 1819 (Special Collections)
Michaux, Francois André.
The North American sylva, or A description of the forest trees of the United
States, Canada, and Nova Scotia. Considered particularly with respect to their
use in the arts and their introduction into commerce. To which is added a
description of the most useful of the European forest trees...
Tr. from the French of F. Andrew Michaux ... with notes by J. Jay Smith
...Philadelphia, D. Rice & A. N. Hart, 1859.
NAL Call No. 454 M582 (Special Collections)
Michaux, Francois André.
The North American sylva, or A description of the forest trees of the United
States, Canada, and Nova Scotia. Considered particularly with respect to their
use in the arts and their introduction into commerce. To which is added a
description of the most useful of the European forest trees...
Tr. from the French of F. Andrew Michaux ... with motes by J. Jay Smith
...Philadelphia, D. Rice, Rutter & Co., 1865.
NAL Call No. 454 M582 (Special Collections)
Michaux, Francois André.
Travels to the westward of the Allegany mountains, in the states of the Ohio,
Kentucky, and Tennessee, and return to Charlestown, through the upper
Carolinas...
Translated from the French. London, 1805.
NAL Call No. 125 M58 (Special Collections)
Michaux, Francois André.
Travels to the westward of the Allegany mountains, in the states of the Ohio,
Kentucky, and Tennessea, and return to Charleston, by the upper
Carolinas...undertaken , in the year 1802...by F. A. Michaux...
(In Thwaites, Reuben G.
Early western travels 1748-1846
. Cleveland, Ohio, 1904. v. 3 (1904) p. 105-306, fold map) Reprint from
London ed., 1805.
NAL Call No. 125 T42 v.3 (General Collection)
Savage, Henry.
Andre and Francois Andre Michaux
. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1986.
NAL Call No. QK31 M45S28 (General Collection)
Nuttall, Thomas (1786-1859)
Graustein, Jeannette E.
Thomas Nuttall, naturalist Explorations in America, 1808-1841
. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1967.
NAL Call No. QH31 N8G7 (General Collection)
Nuttall, Thomas.
Collection towards a flora of the territory of Arkansas
. [Philadelphia, 1837.]
NAL Call No. 455.52 N96C (General Collection)
Nuttall, Thomas.
The genera of North American plants, and a catalogue of the species, to the
year 1817
. Philadelphia: D. Heartt, 1818.
NAL Call No. 454 N96G (Special Collections)
Nuttall, Thomas.
An introduction to systematic and physiological botany
. Cambridge [Mass.] Hilliard and Brown; Boston, Hilliard, Gray, Little, and
Wilkins [etc.] 1827.
NAL Call No. 463 N96 R (General Collection)
Nuttall, Thomas.
A journal of travels into the Arkansa Territory, during the year 1819. With
occasional observations on the manners of the aboringines
. Philadelphia: T. H. Palmer, 1821.
NAL Call No. 125 W96J (Special Collections)
Nuttall, Thomas.
The North American sylva, or A description of the forest trees of the United
States, Canada, and Nova Scotia, not described in the work of F. Andrew
Michaux, and containing all the forest trees discovered in the Rocky mountains,
the territory of Oregon, down to the shores of the Pacific, and into the
confines of California, as well as in various parts of the United States
. Philadelphia: J. Dobson, 1842-49.
NAL Call No. 454 N96N (Special Collections)
Post, Christian Frederick (1710?-1785)
Post, Christian Frederick.
Journey on the forbidden path: chronicles of a diplomatic mission to the
Allegheny country, March-September, 1760
. Edited by Robert S. Grumet; with translations of Delaware words by James A.
Rementer and Bruce L. Pearson. Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society,
1999.
NAL Call No. 500 P533T v. 89, pt. 2 (General Collection)
Smet, Pierre-Jean de (1801-1873)
Smet, Pierre-Jean de.
Missions de l’Oregon et
aux montagnes-Rocheuses, aux soureces de la
Colombie, de l’Athabasca et du Sascatshawin pendant l’annee 1845-46
. Gand [Gent.]: Van der Schelden, [1848].
NAL Call No. 125 Sm35 (General Collection)
Weiser, Conrad (1696-1760)
Claus, Daniel.
The journals of Christian Daniel Claus and Conrad Weiser: a journey to
Onondaga, 1750
. Translated and edited by Heig Doblin and William A. Starna. Philadelphia:
American Philosophical Society, 1994.
NAL Call No. 500 P533 v. 84, pt. 2 (General Collection)
Wied-Neuwied, Maximilian Alexander Philip, prinz von (1782-1867)
Wied-Neuwied, Maximilian Alexander Philip, prinz von.
Reise in das innere Nord American in den jahren 1832 bis 1834
. 2 volumes. 70 plates. Coblenz, 1839-41.
NAL Call No. 125 M45 (Special Collections)
Wied-Neuwied, Maximilian Alexander Philip, prinz von.
Reise nach Brasilien ir den jahren 1815 bis 1817
. Frankfurt, 1820.
NAL Call No. 125 M45 R (Special Collections)
Wied-Neuwied, Maximilian Alexander Philip, prinz von.
Travels in Brazil in the years 1815, 1816, 1817
. Part I. London, 1820.
NAL Call No. 125 M45T (Special Collections)
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November 14, 2001
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