Thomas Jefferson’s Message to Congress about the Lewis and Clark Expedition

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Thomas Jefferson’s Message to Congress about the Lewis and Clark Expedition
Overview
Context
About the Author
Explanation and Analysis of the Document
Audience
Impact
Document Text

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Abstract

Twenty-five years after the Declaration of Independence was first signed, the foreign territory beyond the Mississippi River remained vast, largely undiscovered terrain to the U.S. government. The land was sparsely populated by various Native American tribes as well as by occasional explorers and trappers from Spain, France, Britain, and the United States. In 1803, President Thomas Jefferson proposed sending an exploratory team to investigate the territory. In making his request for a small, specialized group of military personnel, dubbed the Corps of Discovery, to be used for exploration, Jefferson marked a new era in U.S. history: While governmental sponsorship of exploration had been used in other nations, Jefferson’s request was the first made by a president of the United States. His message specifically proposed the use of federal funds and personnel to explore the west, as he believed that accessing and recording information about the continent and its opportunities would be critically important to the growth and development of the nation. With his strong commitment to pursuing western discovery, Jefferson set a precedent for the application of federal funds to the mapping of western North America.

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