![LEWIS, Meriwether (1774-1809) and William CLARK (1770-1838). History of the Expedition under the Command of Captains Lewis and Clark, to the Sources of the Missouri, thence across the Rocky Mountains and down the River Columbia to the Pacific Ocean. Performed during the years 1804--5--6. Philadelphia: [by J. Maxwell for] Bradford and Inskeep 1814.](https://www.christies.com/img/LotImages/2012/NYR/2012_NYR_02607_0053_000(lewis_meriwether_and_william_clark_history_of_the_expedition_under_the094117).jpg?w=1)
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LEWIS, Meriwether (1774-1809) and William CLARK (1770-1838). History of the Expedition under the Command of Captains Lewis and Clark, to the Sources of the Missouri, thence across the Rocky Mountains and down the River Columbia to the Pacific Ocean. Performed during the years 1804--5--6. Philadelphia: [by J. Maxwell for] Bradford and Inskeep 1814.
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LEWIS, Meriwether (1774-1809) and William CLARK (1770-1838). History of the Expedition under the Command of Captains Lewis and Clark, to the Sources of the Missouri, thence across the Rocky Mountains and down the River Columbia to the Pacific Ocean. Performed during the years 1804--5--6. Philadelphia: [by J. Maxwell for] Bradford and Inskeep 1814.
2 volumes, 8o (213 x 130 mm). Five engraved maps in the text. (Without the folding map as is usually the case, spotting and occasional foxing as usual). Contemporary tree calf, rounded spines gilt-tooled in six compartments, gilt-lettered morocco labels, 1844 newsclipping pasted to blank xiv. (Neatly re-hinged, light rubbing to extremities). A GOOD COPY IN A CONTEMPORARY BINDING.
FIRST EDITION: THE "DEFINITIVE ACCOUNT OF THE MOST IMPORTANT EXPLORATION OF THE NORTH AMERICAN CONTINENT" (WAGNER-CAMP), including a prefatory "Life of Captain Lewis" by President Jefferson. The expedition, commissioned by Jefferson and funded by Congress in early 1803 (it cost all of $2,500), was the first exploration officially sponsored by the Federal government. The acquisition of Louisiana Territory, finalized in December of the same year, increased the importance and urgency of the expedition, which set out from St. Louis in May 1804 and covered 8000 miles in the next 2 years, crossing the Rocky Mountains and reaching the mouth of the Columbia River before returning by the same route.
Publication of Lewis's and Clark's account of their epic expedition was delayed by the appointments of both leaders to official positions in the new Louisiana Territory (Lewis as territorial Governor and Clark as Superintendent of Indian Affairs), then by Lewis's strange murder or suicide in 1809. This "most important of all overland narratives" (Grolier) was finally brought to press but a high proportion of the copies issued in this first printing, which is replete with errors, apparently lacked the folding map or were otherwise defective. A 1970 census by Columbia University Libraries recorded only 21 extant copies, of which several were incomplete or restored. Church 1309; Cohen Mapping the West 7; Graff 2477; Grolier American 30; Howes L-317; PMM 272; Sabin 40828; Streeter III:1777; Streeter Americana Beginnings 52; Wagner-Camp-Becker 13.1.(2). Provenance: Joun MacAllister, signature on title of vol.1. (2)
2 volumes, 8o (213 x 130 mm). Five engraved maps in the text. (Without the folding map as is usually the case, spotting and occasional foxing as usual). Contemporary tree calf, rounded spines gilt-tooled in six compartments, gilt-lettered morocco labels, 1844 newsclipping pasted to blank xiv. (Neatly re-hinged, light rubbing to extremities). A GOOD COPY IN A CONTEMPORARY BINDING.
FIRST EDITION: THE "DEFINITIVE ACCOUNT OF THE MOST IMPORTANT EXPLORATION OF THE NORTH AMERICAN CONTINENT" (WAGNER-CAMP), including a prefatory "Life of Captain Lewis" by President Jefferson. The expedition, commissioned by Jefferson and funded by Congress in early 1803 (it cost all of $2,500), was the first exploration officially sponsored by the Federal government. The acquisition of Louisiana Territory, finalized in December of the same year, increased the importance and urgency of the expedition, which set out from St. Louis in May 1804 and covered 8000 miles in the next 2 years, crossing the Rocky Mountains and reaching the mouth of the Columbia River before returning by the same route.
Publication of Lewis's and Clark's account of their epic expedition was delayed by the appointments of both leaders to official positions in the new Louisiana Territory (Lewis as territorial Governor and Clark as Superintendent of Indian Affairs), then by Lewis's strange murder or suicide in 1809. This "most important of all overland narratives" (Grolier) was finally brought to press but a high proportion of the copies issued in this first printing, which is replete with errors, apparently lacked the folding map or were otherwise defective. A 1970 census by Columbia University Libraries recorded only 21 extant copies, of which several were incomplete or restored. Church 1309; Cohen Mapping the West 7; Graff 2477; Grolier American 30; Howes L-317; PMM 272; Sabin 40828; Streeter III:1777; Streeter Americana Beginnings 52; Wagner-Camp-Becker 13.1.(2). Provenance: Joun MacAllister, signature on title of vol.1. (2)