The Pirogue. MOP s First Encounters Theme is a Hit at LCTHF 43 rd Annual Meeting; Huzzah! 2011 LCTHF Annual Meeting Issue

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September September 2011 2011 Volume Volume 1, Issue 1, Issue 3a 3a 2011 LCTHF Annual Meeting Issue MOP s First Encounters Theme is a Hit at LCTHF 43 rd Annual Meeting; Huzzah! MOP Hosts 2011 Annual Event This year, the annual meeting of the Lewis and Clark Trail Heritage Foundation was hosted by the Omaha, Nebraska/Council Bluffs, Iowa based Mouth Of The Platte Chapter of the Lewis & Clark Trail Heritage Foundation. All the folks at the Mouth Of The Platte deserve a hearty pat on the back. Once again, huzzah! In this Special Issue, in words and photos, we hope we ve preserved a sense of the great time that was had by all who attended. Please visit MOP s website by clicking here. Memorable Events During the 4 Days of LCTHF Annual Meeting Yes it was hot, and yes it was humid, but when you have a great place to meet like the Embassy Suites in Omaha, and luxury air-conditioned tour buses to take you to some very historic areas and visit the very places that Lewis and Clark themselves visited and wrote about in their journals, it creates an entirely memorable experience. And so it was this year in the Omaha/Council Bluffs areas of Nebraska, Iowa, and South Dakota. See Page 3. Camp Pomp, a Lewis & Clark Experience for Kids of the LCTHF Camp Pomp is for the children and grandchildren, ages 6 to 18, of LCTHF members, and this year was another success story of the 43 rd Annual Meeting. Camp Pomp kids participated in activities such as wood burning crafts, fish painting, Dutch Oven cooking, and learned about Lewis and Clark from educators and re-enactors. Read what Andrea Spencer has to say about her experience at Camp Pomp this year on page 4. pictures, Pictures, PICTURES! There was no end to the photo ops at this year s LCTHF Annual Meeting, and we re only sorry we had to be very selective as to which ones to display in our Special Issue s photo spread. We know everyone got some great shots this year, as you no doubt do every year. So as you look over the ones we got, make sure you show off your own to your family and friends, and tell them what a great time you had! See ours beginning on page 5. Kira Gale, Local Area Treasure The Pirogue would like to recognize Kira Gale as a special member of the Mouth of the Platte Chapter for adding richness and detail to the discussion of the Tri-State area history. Please click here to visit Kira s website. Della Bauer (Right), President of Mouth of the Platte Chapter, and Mary Langhorst (Left), Chapter Secretary. LCTHF Controversy Spills Over Into the Press. Rift Tears Group! The weather in Omaha was seasonably warm for August, but the heat was not only outdoors for the LCTHF. There were occasionally heated words indoors as well, at the pre-activities board meeting and at the Members Business Meeting. Fortunately the contentiousness did not keep anyone from enjoying the activities and excursions to several area historical Lewis & Clark sites. Read one LCTHF member s opinion on page 8, and if you re up to it, submit your own. Contact Us Contact The Pirogue at ThePirogue@eotp.net about receiving this publication, or joining the Encounters On The Prairie Chapter of the Lewis & Clark Trail Heritage Foundation. EOTP Board Members Bill Stevens, President; email; bill.stevens@eotp.net Chuck Schroyer, Vice President Beverly Lewis, Secretary/Treasurer; email: beverly.lewis@eotp.net Rich Avilla, Editor/Publisher, The Pirogue; email: rich.avilla@eotp.net Dorinda Daniel, Board Member Frenchy Taft, Board Member Richard Phillips, Board Member

Page 2 In Memoriam Jane Randol Jackson After we had returned from a successful LCTHF Annual Meeting in Omaha, we were shocked and saddened to learn that our friend and steadfast advocate for the Lewis & Clark story, a leader in the stewardship of The Trail, Jane Randol Jackson, had unexpectedly passed away in her home. Thank you, Jane, for giving so much of yourself to the Lewis and Clark Trail Heritage Foundation. We shall miss your presence and we know that your wish for those of us who remain is to proceed on! Until we meet again, dear friend.

LTCHF 2011 Annual Meeting in Omaha, Congrats MOP! Page 3 The 43 rd Annual Meeting of the Lewis & Clark Trail Heritage Foundation is now in the books. Hosted by the Mouth Of The Platte Chapter of the LCTHF, the main gathering place for the 2011 Annual Meeting, from July 31 st to August 3 rd,was at the Embassy Suites in the Market Square area of downtown Omaha, Nebraska. Some members plan their summer vacations to coincide with LCTHF annual meetings. Mike Nelezen, for example, from Wisconsin s Badger Chapter, was on a multi-state road trip and spent 4 days of it attending the meeting. Lou Ritten, President of the Illini Chapter, took a circuitous route from his home in La Grange, Illinois, visiting favorite locations along the way. The weather over the four days was in a word, hot, but we were provided with full-size, air-conditioned touring buses, and plenty of water and energy snacks. And a special thanks goes out to the NPS Ranger Jolene who was born in Omaha, and entertained riders on the Sergeant Floyd bus with readings from the Lewis & Clark Journals and talked about other local history. Especially moving was our experience in Sioux City, Iowa, at the reenactment of the funeral of Sgt. Charles Floyd which was performed at the site of the Floyd Monument, the final resting place of the only member of the Corps of Discovery to die during The Expedition. Other sites LCTHF members visited included a trek to the top of Spirit Mound, an 83 foot high earthen mound, 9 miles from the shores of the Missouri River. According to Indian legend the mound was inhabited by little deavels in human form who would kill any human who Dr. Gary Moulton from Lincoln, Nebraska, and information technology guru, Ken Jutzi from Camarillo, CA, were among the attendees. There were over 140 attendees at this year s meet with Lewis & Clark fans from LCTHF chapters all over the country, some flying, some driving long distances to be at the Foundation s signature event of the year. Lou Ritten, Illini Chapter President with his wife, Carolyn, Della Bauer and Mary Langhorst, and their crew did a great job dealing with record-breaking flooding and extreme temperatures. I especially liked the whole day of the bus trip up to Spirit Mound. ventured near. Lewis and Clark, and a several members of the Corps were the first white men to visit Spirit Mound, and reported not seeing any small evil creatures brandishing weapons. The Blue Shirts! Mouth of the Platte Chapter member/volunteers were everywhere, and offered smiles, friendly conversation, and quality information. Above left to right, Bob Hastert, Evelyn Orr, and Marian, Meyer, strategize as the 4-day event begins. Upon arriving at the Embassy Suites, LCTHF members were greeted by blue-shirted Mouth Of The Platte Chapter volunteers, with gift bags of books, area maps, a schedule of events, and brochures of local attractions. Since all the volunteers are local residents, they were everyone s go to people for directions to anywhere in the Omaha area, and could be overheard quite often issuing their response to one of the first questions asked from newly arriving members, First door on the right. Our last day, August 3 rd, was every bit as memorable as the first 3, with a visit to Fort Atkinson, Iowa, where Lewis & Clark s first council with the Otoe Missouri Indians was re-enacted near the area where this first encounter actually happened. As we all headed home the morning after the LCTHF Awards Banquet, a bit tired, but full of wonderful memories and many great photographs of the past few days, the consensus was that this was yet another great LCTHF Annual Meeting. Well done Mouth of the Platte!

Page 4 Camp Pomp By Andrea Spencer (Editor s note: Andrea Spencer, 12, was one the Camp Pomp Kids at this year s Annual LCTHF Meeting. We asked Andrea what Camp Pomp was like, and she was kind enough to write an article for The Pirogue about her experiences at this year s Camp Pomp.) Clark had. Another activity we did was to make fish prints on paper and bags. The best thing we did at Camp Pomp was make animal paw Camp Pomp was very interesting. We were very excited about it! There were seven of us attending the camp. On the first day we talked about The Corps of Discovery and shared what we knew about them. We also did geo-caching and talked with re-enactors. Pierre Cruzatte was one of the re-enactors. He played the violin and the fiddle. We played Daniel Slosberg from the California Chapter is a re-enactor who interprets the Corps of Discovery s Pierre Cruzatte. Above, Slosberg entertains and engages Camp Pomp kids with the music Cruzatte would have played for the men of the Expedition. prints in clay! Others enjoyed the wood burning tool and burned a design in a wooden chair that we gave to the Western Trails Center. Andrea Spencer with a Corps of Discovery re-enactor. some instruments that he had brought and danced with him. The other re-enactor was Mrs. Marks. She talked about her son, Meriwether Lewis, and her life. The last re-enactor was William Clark. He was awesome! On the second day of Camp Pomp we had a very yummy lunch. It was a Dutch oven cooked meal. We ate bison and a fruit cup with the same type of fruit that Clark had on his birthday! For Clarks birthday a teacher named Mrs. Waters made a chocolate cake. We made possibility bags like Lewis and The kids of Camp Pomp with Mrs. Marks, Captain Clark, and Pierre Cruzatte, aboard a life-size model of the Corp of Discovery s Keel Boat. I had such a great time at Camp Pomp, and I know other kids would love it too! Please bring your children and grandchildren to the next camp, and I promise they will learn tons about Lewis and Clark and have a great time!

Page 5 Four Memorable Days, The 43 rd LCTHF Annual Meeting in Omaha! August 2011, Omaha NE/Council Bluffs, IA - Everyone who attended this year s Lewis and Clark Trail Heritage Foundation s annual meeting owes the Mouth of the Platte Chapter a big thank you for serving up a wonderful set of experiences for all the attendees who drove, rode, and flew in from all corners of the country to participate in, and commemorate the Corps of Discovery s passage and experiences through what is now the Omaha and Council Bluffs area. This year s theme, First Encounters celebrated and marked several key events of The Expedition which took place in the area; Lewis and Clark s first encounters with the Peoples of the area, known as the Otoe Missouri Indians (although they are also known as the Missouri Otoe Indians), the passing and burial of Sergeant Charles Floyd, the only member of the Corps of Discovery to die during the entire journey, and their introduction to local Indian folklore. Although St. Louis, Missouri, is considered the point at which The Expedition officially started, the area of present-day Omaha and Council Bluffs was really the jumping off point where the Corps actually began their exploration of heretofore largely unknown regions of the country. By the time they reached this area, three months after their departure from St. Louis, rowing against the current of the Missouri River, these intrepid explorers were now literally on their own. As for anything they needed for subsistence, if they did not already have it with them, they would have to improvise, barter for it, or do without. Indeed, were it not for the benevolence of some of the friendly Indians they encountered, and their own wits, the men may well have not survived, Barely a week after Sergeant Floyd s death on August 20 th, 1804, another member of the Corps, Private George Shannon failed to return after going out to search for some lost horses near present day Yankton, South Dakota. Imagine the dismay the entire crew must have felt after having lost one of their key personnel, and now not knowing the fate of yet another one of their own, and the youngest member of the Corps at that. Shannon, who was 18 at the time, was fortunately reunited with his comrades 15 days later on September 11 th. So this was the backdrop of the four wonderful days that was the 43 rd annual meeting of the LCTHF in the Tri-State area of Nebraska, Iowa, and South Dakota, and the activities orchestrated by Della Bauer, Mary Langhorst, Dick Williams, and the rest of the members of the Mouth of the Platte Chapter will be remembered as yet another excellent, educational, and fun time that was had by all who were fortunate enough to be there. With this then, we present the following collection of photos as a remembrance of the four days at the LCTHF 43 rd Annual Meeting! Click here for a special Spirit Mound collection of photos. The Embassy Suites and Conference Center in downtown Omaha, near the recently restored Market Square area provided the venue for most of the indoor activities during the 2011 LCTHF Annual Meeting, and provided welcome relief from the near 100 degree and high humidity weather. Among the amenities offered were full complimentary breakfasts, featuring cooked to order omelets and pancakes in a spacious dining area; a great place to meet up with fellow Lewis and Clark enthusiasts over breakfast and coffee before starting out each day s activities.

Page 6 These Were The Days in August, 4 Memorable Days! Set up day! LCTHF chapters with booths and area artisans spent Saturday, July 31, setting up their wares for sale in one of the ample conference rooms of the Embassy Suites. Not just for Grownups. Kids at Camp Pomp this year got a taste of what is was like cooking, playing, and creating art without electricity and modern-day conveniences. What?! No Nintendo! No XBox! Enjoying the outdoors indoors, inside the air conditioned atrium at the Joslyn Museum after Clay Jenkinson s Talk, In the Footsteps of Lewis & Clark: Prince Maximillian and Karl Bodmer. In Sioux City, Iowa, re-enactors commemorate Sergeant Charles Floyd s burial with full military honors near a monument erected in his honor. Floyd was the only member of expedition to die during expedition. George Drouillard (Darrell Draper) tells the story of his life from the time he meets his spirit brother, a red-tailed hawk, until he, Drouillard, joins the hawk in flight after being killed during an Indian attack. Above, Jerry Simmons, from Sioux Falls, SD, as Toussant Charbonneau joins in as Drouillard tells his story. Even today, crimes at Fort Atkinson seldom go unpunished, and LCTHF members are not exempt. Later found to be completely innocent of unspecified charges, Dr. Brad Tennant, a history professor at Aberdeen Presentation College, SD, was thankful he was not subjected to a spell in the sweat box!

Page 7 Four Days of History, A Lifetime of Memories! Re-enactors, including Peyton Bud Clark (seated in uniform), a direct descendant of William Clark, re-create Lewis & Clark s first encounter with the Otoe Missouri Indians at Fort Atkinson, Iowa. Kaboom! This cannon was fired for visitors at the Western Trails Museum in Council Bluffs, Iowa. No special reason for the firing. It was there, and there was powder available, so why not? Flooding on the Mighty Mo! This picture, taken from the Lewis & Clark Monument above Council Bluffs, with Omaha in the background, shows the flood waters along the Missouri River. The red circle shows where the south-bound lanes of Interstate 29 emerge from waters that have spilled over the river s banks. The Encounters On The Prairie Chapter was well represented at this years LCTHF Annual Meeting. Left to right are: Randy Kidd, President Bill Stevens, DeeAnn Stevens, Lynne Avilla, Rich Avilla, Brad Tennant, Beverly Lewis, Jerry Simmons, Gayle Simmons, Richard Phillips, and Mark Smith.

Page 8 That Ole Gang of Mine - Opinion by Dave Pidcock Back in the 40 s, when I was a young boy in Minneapolis, and prior to moving out to the country, I lived on Washburn Avenue South. On our block there were probably 15 kids or more, all about the same age, between 8 and 12 years old. We kind of formed a fellowship group. We called ourselves, the Washburns, and the kids over on Vincent called themselves the Vincents, and the kids on Upton, the Uptons. It seemed that we Washburns did everything together. We played baseball together, were in and out of each others homes reading and trading comic books, eating at each other s house, and when winter came, we made plans for winter activities. This was a neat group with a great deal of camaraderie talk about the good old days! Then one day a couple of new boys showed up who had recently moved into the neighborhood, and they began hanging out with us, but it seemed that they immediately tried to change what the group was always doing. It took the fun out of everything, and caused a lot of friction; and then, in eerie coincidence to recent developments within the LCTHF, they wanted to move the clubhouse! So, the group decided to take a vote, because even kids that age can understand what it means to be fair and open. So that old gang of mine, we took a vote as to how we were going to conduct the group and the activities we wanted to pursue. That was the group process that had been so much of the fun of belonging. In the process, the majority prevailed and the two new kids stopped hanging out with us, and soon everything was back to normal. Dave Pidcock It looks like the LCTHF is now teetering in about the same situation. Until recently, we ve had a solid Foundation, with many super chapters and members who are the life blood of this organization, carrying out many worthwhile projects that have sustained the interest in Lewis & Clark throughout America. But now find ourselves at a crossroads, similar to what my old group faced in Minneapolis back in the 40 s, and although we still have much of that ole gang in us, there are some new kids on the block who seem bent on making fundamental changes our group in ways that go against the grain of long established traditions. True, we must be able to adjust in some ways in order to keep abreast of the times, and we do need to question some of the ways we do things, especially in how we sustain ourselves to remain a viable and dynamic organization, but we need to be careful lest we throw out the baby with the bathwater. It seems that some of the members on the Foundation board could use a little more creativity and vision in initiating a plan, or plans, for raising operating funds without destroying everything we ve built. This lack of vision is causing division and controversy within the Foundation s membership, and this controversy has spilled over into the press. Click here to read some of the negative press coverage that this controversy has generated. Although, for the time being, the most radical of the new ideas, moving the LCTHF Headquarters out of Great Falls, Montana, has been somewhat quelled, thanks to the continuing efforts of stalwart LCTHF Directors at Large, Gary Moulton, Jay Buckley, Dick Williams, and Bill Stevens, and we all owe these four, and many others, a debt of gratitude, but it s not over yet. There are some in the LCTHF Executive Committee who cannot let it go, and are resorting to inflammatory and puerile rhetoric, so the winds of controversy continue to swirl. All we ve worked for, and built, can still be destroyed if we don t continue to stand up for our convictions and fight the good fight. Let s keep our LCTHF Headquarters in Great Falls! Soon, we will all have an opportunity to vote on several initiatives in a member opinion survey to be mailed out to the LCTHF membership. It s not certain if moving the headquarters issue will be on it, although some in the executive committee are sure trying to get it included. Either way folks, I ask you to please read all the information, discuss it with your friends, and then vote with your heart. Dave Pidcock, Vice President, Portage Route Chapter; email: DEPVisionQuest@aol.com. (The opinions expressed on this page do not necessarily reflect the views of The Pirogue, and are presented as a public service. Opinions are welcomed at The Pirogue and replies to the above article will be published the Fall issue which will be released in early October 2011. All entries are subject to editing for content and space. Ed)