As written on: http://www.thebeadsite.com/
"Meriwether Lewis, secretary to President Thomas Jefferson, was commissioned by
the President to lead the Corps of Volunteers for Northwest Discovery. Lewis
chose his friend, William Clark, to help him."
"The young United States had just purchased Louisiana from the French.
Negotiations went on for years, and the boundaries were a subject of contention
even longer (the final claim was not resolved until 1920). But the upshot was
that a million square miles (2,590,000 sq. km) was bought for about four cents
an acre (ten cents a hectare) and eventually was carved up into ten states and
most of four others"
"This enormous territory had to be explored, maps made and observations taken
of the natural history of the region. So in May 1804 Lewis, Clark and their men
set out on a two and a half year journey up the Missouri River, across the Rocky
Mountains, down the Columbia River and back. They knew beads would be useful, so
they had them with them. The records show they had:
5 pounds of white wampum
5 pounds of glass beads, mostly small
20
pounds of red glass beads, assorted
5 pounds of yellow or orange beads,
assorted
2 cards of beads
3 pounds of beads
73 bunches of beads,
assorted
8 1/2 pounds of red beads
2 bead necklaces for young women
10
maces of white round beads for girls
2 maces of sky blue round beads for
girls
3 maces of yellow round beads for girls
3 maces of red beads for
girls
14 maces of yellow round seed beads for girls
5 maces of mock
garnets
[A pound is about 454 grams. I don't have any idea what a "card" is. Nor can
I figure out what a "mace" is in the context of early nineteenth century
America. A "bunch" cannot be further identified, as there are many types,
depending on the maker, the bead and the destination.]
"So, we really can't tell much from this list (actually a composite of three
lists) except that most of the beads were monochrome glass, many of them seed
beads. The mock garnets are probably Bohemian, though they might be Venetian.
Wampum was also included. There was no "Lewis and Clark" bead."
:"The beads were fine until they got to the Columbia River system. There they
were no good. Wampum was refused. Lewis wrote that the people had their own
wampum. He was apparently describing dentalium (one screen down), a mollusk
shell that is a natural bead because it is a somewhat curved open tube. They
were fished along what are now Oregon, Washington and British Columbia and
traded up to Alaska."
"Try as they might, the explorers could not get rid of most of their beads. On
a couple of occasions red beads, so popular in the Northeast, were flatly
refused. Only the blue and white beads were acceptable".
"On the way home they did strike a bargain for a canoe in exchange for wampum,
but the man who made the bargain came back and demanded the return of his canoe.
Lewis commented, "To this we consented, as we knew this method of trading to be
very common and deemed perfectly fair." Apparently the origin of "Indian trader"
was not initially a pejorative."
"Actually, the expedition nearly starved because it didn't have the right
beads. The explorers had little to trade for food. At one point, some blue beads
were found because they had been accidentally left in the pocket of a waistcoat.
They were immediately traded for salmon, no doubt eagerly devoured."
"So, what beads did the Native Americans want? They knew very well and were
very specific about it. Lewis learned about them the hard way:
[T]he object of foreign trade which is the most desired, are the common
cheap, blue or white beads, of about fifty or seventy to the penny weight, which
are strung on strands a fathom in length, and sold by the yard, or the length of
both arms; of these [,] blue beads, which are called tia commachuck, or
chief beads, hold the first rank in their ideas of relative value; the most
inferior kind, are esteemed beyond the finest wampum, and are temptations which
can always seduce them to part with their most valuable effects. Indeed, if the
example of civilized life did not completely vindicate their choice, we might
wonder at their infatuated attachment to a bauble in itself so worthless. Yet
these beads are, perhaps, quite as reasonable objects of research as the
precious metals, since they are at once beautiful ornaments for the person, and
the great calculating medium of trade with all the nations on the Columbia."
[Meriwether Lewis 1814 History of the Expedition under the Command of
Captains Lewis and Clark reproduced in 1966 in the March of America Facsimile
Series No. 56, Ann Arbor, Vol. 2, p. 144]
"What were these beads? They were wound, opaque, light blue glass beads from
China. They are similar to, likely identical to, "Padre beads" in the American
Southwest."
"They came into the Northwest via Alaska, first with Vitus Bering and the
Russians. They were long in demand in Alaska. American skippers brought them
because they sold Russian fur to China and Chinese goods to the Russians in
Alaska (the Russians were barred from Chinese ports). The beads quickly moved
south. Captain Cook was amazed to see them in an area he knew the Russians had
not yet reached."
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Lewis and Clark Beads: www.rowenaart.net/store
www.rowenaart.net
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