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The address of the Weippe Hilltop Heritage Society Inc is: Po 279, Weippe, ID 83553

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Q: Where is the Weippe Hilltop Heritage Society Inc in Weippe Idaho located?
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Where is the Weippe Hilltop Heritage Museum in Weippe Idaho located?

The address of the Weippe Hilltop Heritage Museum is: 617 N Main St, Weippe, ID 83553


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The phone number of the Weippe Hilltop Heritage Museum is: 208-435-4200.


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The address of the Clearwater District - Weippe Public is: 204 Wood St, Weippe, 83553 0435


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The phone number of the Clearwater District - Weippe Public is: 208-435-4058.


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What were some new waterways Lewis and Clark had discovered?

New waterways discovered by the Lewis and Clark expedition: 2000 Mile Creek, Montana Battle River, Montana Beaver Dam River, South Dakota Beaverhead River, Montana Big Dry Creek, Montana Big Dry River, Montana Big Grave Creek, Virginia Big Hole River, Montana Big Muddy River, Montana Big Nemaha River, Nebraska Big Sioux Rivers, South Dakota - Iowa Bighorn River, Wyoming Blackfoot River, Montana Bozeman Pass, Montana Buffalo Creek, Montana Buffalo Island, Montana Cannon Beach, Oregon Cannonball River, North Dakota Canoe Creek, Washington Cape Disappointment, Washington Cascades of the Columbia (Great Rapids) Cat River, Iowa Cataract River, Washington Cedar Creek, Missouri Celilo Falls, Columbia River Cheyenne Creek Cheyenne River, Wyoming - South Dakota Chopunnish River, Idaho Clark's Fork, Yellowstone River, Wyoming Clearwater River, Idaho Cokahlahishkit River, Montana Colorado River and Basin Colt Creek, Idaho Coltkilled Creek, Montana Columbia River and Basin Cowlitz River, Washington Creek on High Water, South Dakota Crooked Falls, Montana Cruzattes's River, Washington Dearborn River, Oregon Deer Island, Columbia River Des Moines River, Iowa Des Moines River, Oregon Deschutes River, Oregon Field's Creek, Montana Fish River, North Dakota Flathead River, Montana Floyd River, Iowa Frazer's Creek, Montana Gallatin River, Montana - Wyoming Glade Creek, Montana Goose Egg Lake, North Dakota Grays Bay, Washington Great Spirit is Bad Creek, Nebraska Hood River, Oregon Horseshoe River, Oregon Horseshoe Bend Creek, Idaho Hungry Creek, Montana James River, North Dakota - South Dakota Jefferson River, Montana Kansas River, Kansas Knife River, North Dakota Kooskooske River, Idaho La Charette Creek, Missouri Labiche River, Oregon Lemhi Pass, Idaho - Montana Lemhi River, Idaho Lewis and Clark River, Oregon Lewis' River, Idaho Little Basin, Missouri River, North Dakota Little Dry Creek, Montana Little Dry River, Montana Little Muddy River, Nebraska Little Sioux River, Iowa Lochsa River, Idaho Long Beach Peninsula, Washington Lookout Creek, South Dakota Madison River, Montana Marias River, Montana Martha's River, Montana McNeal's Creek, Montana Medicine River, Montana Milk River, Montana Miry Creek, North Dakota Moreau River, South Dakota Mouse River, North Dakota Multnomah River, Oregon Musselshell Rapid, Columbia River New Timberland River, Washington Nightingale Creek, Missouri No Timber Creek, South Dakota North Fork, Clearwater River, Idaho Oak Creek, South Dakota Onion Creek, North Dakota Otter Creek, South Dakota Panther Creek, Montana Pipestone Creek, Minnesota Platte River, Nebraska Pocasse Creek, South Dakota Porcupine River, Montana Portage Creek, Montana Quawmarsh Creek, Idaho Quick Sand River, Oregon Reuben Creek, South Dakota Rio Colorado Rio Grande Rock Dam Creek, Montana Roloje Creek, Nebraska Rose River, Montana Ruby River, Montana Salmon River, Idaho Sandy River, Oregon Sentinal Creek, South Dakota Shoshone Cove, Idaho Sioux River, South Dakota - Iowa Snake River, Idaho Soldier's River, Iowa Spirit Lake, Iowa Stone Idol Creek, South Dakota Stone River, Iowa Teton River, Montana Tillamook Head, Oregon Tongue Point, Oregon Tongue River, Wyoming - Montana Towarnehiooks River, Oregon Track Creek, Montana Traveler's Rest Creek, Montana Turf Creek, Montana Two Medicine River, Montana Valley Plain River, Montana Vermillion River, South Dakota Weippe Prairie, Idaho Weiser River, Idaho White Bear Islands, Montana White Brant Creek, South Dakota White Cliffs, Missouri Breaks, Montana White Stone River, South Dakota Willamette River, Oregon Willard's Creek, Montana Willow Creek, Iowa Willow Run, Montana Wind River, Washington Wisdom River, Montana Yellowstone River


Where did Lewis and Clark stop along the way?

August 1, 1770 -- William Clark, BornAugust 18, 1774 -- Meriwether Lewis, BornMarch 6, 1801 -- Lewis is asked by President Jefferson to be his secretary-aideSpring, 1803 -- Lewis picked as commander of expedition. Writes to ask William Clark to join him and share command. Clark accepts.July 4, 1803 -- Announcement of Louisiana Purchase.Summer, 1803 -- Large keelboat constructed in Pittsburgh, overseen by Lewis. After construction Lewis takes it down the Ohio River picking up Clark and recruits along the way.Fall/Winter, 1803 -- Camp Wood established upstream from St. Louis.May 14, 1804 --Expedition begins.July 4, 1804 --Expedition marks first 4th of July west of the Mississippi by firing the keelboat's cannon, and naming Independence Creek.August 3, 1804 -- Corps of Discovery meet with representatives of the Oto and Missouri Indians, give peace medals, 15 star flags and other gifts.August 20, 1804 -- Near present day Sioux City, Iowa, Sgt. Charles Floyd dies of a probable burst appendix. Captains name hilltops where he is buried Floyd's Bluff and a nearby stream, Floyd's River.August 30, 1804 -- Friendly council with Yankton Sioux held.September 7, 1804 -- All of the men attempt to drown a never-before-seen prarie dog out of its hole for shipment back to Jefferson.September 25, 1804 -- Confrontation with Teton Sioux, who demand one of the expedition's boats as a toll to travel farther upriver. Chief Black Buffalo resolves situation before any fighting. Expedition stays with tribe for 3 more days.October 24, 1804 -- Expedition discovers earthlodge villages of the Mandan and Hidatsas Indians. The captains decide to build Fort Mandan across the river from the main village.November 4, 1804 -- Toussaint Charbonneau, a French Canadian fur trapper living with the Hidatsas, is hired as an interpreter. His wife, Sacagawea, a Shoshone who had been captured by the Hidatsas and sold to Charbonneau, is also considered helpful as the Shoshones are said to live at the headwaters of the Missouri.December 24, 1804 -- Fort Mandan completed, expedition moves in for the winter.February 11, 1805 -- Sacagawea gives birth to baby boy, Jean Baptiste.April 7, 1805 -- Lewis and Clark send the keelboat and approx. a dozen men back downriver, with maps, reports, Indian artifacts and other scientific specimens for Jefferson. The remaining party heads west.April 29, 1805 -- Lewis and another hunter kill a large grizzly bear, which had never before been described for science.May 29, 1805 -- Clark names the Judith River in honor of a girl back in Virginia he hopes to marry.June 2, 1805 --The expedition comes to a fork in the river. Lewis and Clark believe the south fork is the Missouri, while all of the other men believe it is the north fork. Although they are not convinced that the south fork is the Missouri the captains recount; "they were ready to follow us any where we thought proper to direct."June 13, 1805 -- Scouting ahead of the rest of the expedition, Lewis comes across the Great Falls of the Missouri. He also discovers four more waterfalls farther upstream. The expedition will have to portage over eighteen miles, taking nearly a month, to get past them.Late July, 1805 -- The expedition reaches the three forks of the Missouri River, and name them the Gallatin, the Madison, and the Jefferson, after the Secretary of the Treasury, Albert Gallatin, the Secretary of State, James Madison, and President Thomas Jefferson. The expedition continues southwest, up the Jefferson.August 8, 1805 -- Sacagawea recognizes Beaverhead Rock and says they are nearing the headwaters of the Missouri, and her people, the Shoshones. Lewis and three others scout ahead.August 12, 1805 -- The shipment sent from fort Mandan arrives in the East and is delivered to Jefferson. Lewis ascends the final ridge toward the Continental Divide expecting to see plains and a river flowing to the Pacific, but he finds even more mountains.August 17, 1805 -- Lewis discovers a village of Shoshones and tries to negotiate for horses. Clark and the rest of the expedition arrives as well, and it is discovered that the Shoshone chief Cameahwait is Sacagawea's brother. Lewis and Clark name the site Camp Fortunate.August 31, 1805 -- The expedition sets out with a Shoshone guide called Old Toby, along with 29 horses and a mule.September 9, 1805 -- The expedition camps at present day Missoula, Montana, a spot Lewis and Clark called Travelers Rest to prepare for the mountain crossing.September 22, 1805 -- After nearly starving in the mountains the expedition emerges near present-day Weippe, Idaho.October 16, 1805 -- The expedition reaches the Columbia River.October 18, 1805 -- Clark sees Mount Hood in the distance, named by a British sea captain in 1792, proof that they are near the ocean.November 7, 1805 -- Clark, who believes he can see the ocean writes his most famous journal entry: "Ocian in view! O! the joy." The expedition is actually still 20 miles from the sea. Terrible storms halt the expedition for nearly 3 weeks.November 24, 1805 -- By majority vote the expedition decides to cross to the south side of the Columbia River to build winter quarters.January 4, 1806 -- President Jefferson welcomes a delegation of Missouri, Oto, Arikara, and Yankton Sioux chiefs who had met with Lewis and Clark more than a year earlier.March 7, 1806 -- The expedition runs out of tobacco. They had run out of their whiskey ration the previous fourth of July.March 23, 1806 -- Fort Clatsop is presented to the Clatsop Indian, for which it was named, and the expedition begins the journey home.May - Late June, 1806 -- The expedition reaches the Bitterroot mountains, but must wait for the snow to melt before crossing them. During this time the expedition again stays with the Nez Perce, Lewis describes them as "the most hospitable, honest and sincere people that we have met with in our voyage."July 3, 1806 -- Having crossed the Bitterroots again, the expedition breaks into smaller groups in order to explore more of the Louisiana Territory. Clark and his group head down the Yellowstone River, while Lewis takes the shortcut to the Great Falls, and then heads north along the Maris River.July 25, 1806 -- Near present-day Billings, Montana, Clark names a sandstone outcropping Pompy's Tower, after sacagawea's son, nicknamed Little Pomp. On the rock face Clark enscribes his name and the date.July 26-27, 1806 -- While making their way back to the Missouri, Lewis' party encounters eight Blackfeet warriors. They camp together, but the morning of the 27th the party catches the blackfeet attempting to steal their horses and guns. During a fight two of the Blackfeet were killed.August 12, 1806 -- All of the parties are reunited downstream from the mouth of the Yellowstone River.August 14, 1806 -- The expedition returns to the Mandan village. Charbonneau, Sacagawea, and Jean Baptist stay, while John Colter is granted permission to return to the Yellowstone to trap beaver.September, 1806 -- With the current of the Missouri behind them, they are able to cover over 70 miles per day. The expedition also begins meeting boats of American traders heading upriver.September 23, 1806 -- Lewis and Clark reach St. Louis.Fall, 1806 -- Lewis and Clark are treated as national heroes. They return to Washington, D.C. The men receive double pay and 320 acres of land as reward, the captains get 1,600 acres. Lewis is named governor of the Louisiana Territory, Clark is made Indian agent for the West and brigadier general of the territory's militia.October 11, 1809 -- Lewis commits suicide at Grinders Stand, an inn south of Nashville.December 20, 1812 -- Sacagawea dies at Fort Manuel. Clark, who is St. Louis, assumes custody of Jean Baptiste, as well as her daughter, Lisette.September 1, 1838 -- William Clark dies at the home of his eldest son, Meriwether Lewis Clark. William Clark had married Julia "Judith" Hancock for whom he had named a river while on the expedition.


What geographic landmarks did Lewis and Clark encounter?

Land Features: 2000 Mile Creek, Montana 3000 Mile Island, Montana Amberson's Island, Ohio River Arkansas River Ash Creek, Missouri Bad-humored Island, South Dakota Bald-Pated Prairie Battle River, Montana Beacon Rock, Washington (Nov 2, 1805) Bear Creek, Missouri Bear Paw Mountains Beaver Dam River, South Dakota Beaverhead River, Montana Beaver's Head Rock, Montana (Aug. 8, 1805) Big Beaver Creek, Pennsylvania Big Bend, Missouri River Big Dry Creek, Montana Big Dry River, Montana Big Grave Creek, Virginia Big Hole Pass, Montana Big Hole River, Montana Big Manitou Creek, Missouri Big Muddy River, Missouri Big Muddy River, Montana Big Nemaha River, Nebraska Big Sioux Rivers, South Dakota - Iowa Big Wheeling Creek, Virginia Bighorn River, Wyoming Bitterroot Mountains, Idaho - Montana Bitterroot River Valley, Montana Black Hills, South Dakota Blackbird Creek, Missouri Blackfoot River, Montana Bonhomme Creek, Missouri Boyer's Creek, Missouri Bozeman Pass, Montana Broken Mountains, Montana Brown's Island, Ohio River Bruno's Island, Pennsylvania Buffalo Creek, Missouri Buffalo Creek, Montana Buffalo Island, Montana Cannon Beach, Oregon Cannonball River, North Dakota Canoe Creek, Washington Cape Disappointment, Washington Carp Island, Missouri River Cascade Range Cascades of the Columbia (Great Rapids) Cat River, Iowa Cataract River, Washington Caution Island, South Dakota Cedar Creek, Missouri Cedar Island, Missouri Celilo Falls, Columbia River Chariton River, Missouri Cheyenne Creek Cheyenne River, Wyoming - South Dakota Chicot Island, Missouri Chopunnish River, Idaho Clark's Fork, Yellowstone River, Wyoming Clearwater River, Idaho Coast Range Cokahlahishkit River, Montana Coldwater Creek, Missouri Colorado River and Basin Colt Creek, Idaho Coltkilled Creek, Montana Columbia River and Basin Continental Divide Council Bluff, Iowa Cowlitz River, Washington Creek of Arrows, Missouri Creek of the Big Rock, Missouri Creek on High Water, South Dakota Crooked Falls, Montana Cruzattes's River, Washington Cupboard Creek, Missouri Dearborn River, Oregon Deer Creek, Missouri Deer Island, Columbia River Des Moines River, Iowa Des Moines River, Oregon Deschutes River, Oregon Devil's Race Ground, Missouri River Diamond Island, Columbia River Elk Island, South Dakota Field's Creek, Montana Fish River, North Dakota Flathead River, Montana Floyd River, Iowa Floyd's Bluff, Iowa Frazer's Creek, Montana Gallatin River, Montana - Wyoming Gasconade River, Missouri Gates of the Rocky Mountains (July 19, 1805) Giant Springs (June 18, 1805) Gibson Pass, Montana Glade Creek, Montana Goat Island, South Dakota Good-humored Island, South Dakota Good Woman's River, Missouri Goodhope Island, South Dakota Goose Egg Lake, North Dakota Grand River, Missouri Grave Creek Mounds, Virginia Grays Bay, Washington Great Falls of the Missouri Great Plains Great Spirit is Bad Creek, Nebraska Grindstone Creek, Missouri Grouse Island, South Dakota Handsome Prairie, Iowa Hat Rock (October 19, 1805) Hocking River, Ohio Hood River, Oregon Horseshoe River, Oregon Horseshoe Bend Creek, Idaho Hungry Creek, Montana Image Canoe Island, Columbia River (November 4, 1805) Indian Knob Creek, Missouri Island of the Mills, Missouri James River, North Dakota - South Dakota Jefferson River, Montana Kansas River, Kansas Knife River, North Dakota Kooskooske River, Idaho La Charette Creek, Missouri Labiche River, Oregon Lamine River, Missouri Lead Creek, Missouri Lemhi Pass, Idaho - Montana Lemhi River, Idaho Letart Falls, Ohio Lewis and Clark Pass, Montana Lewis and Clark River, Oregon Lewis' River, Idaho Little Basin, Missouri River, North Dakota Little Dry Creek, Montana Little Dry River, Montana Little Good Woman's Creek, Missouri Little Grave Creek, Virginia Little Horsetail ripple, Ohio River Little Kanawha River, Virginia Little Manitou Creek, Missouri Little Muddy River, Missouri Little Muddy River, Nebraska Little Sioux River, Iowa Lochsa River, Idaho Logtown Riffle, Ohio River Lolo Hot Springs (September 13, 1805) Lolo Trail, Idaho - Montana Long Beach Peninsula, Washington Lookout Creek, South Dakota Luter Island, Missouri Madison River, Montana Marias River, Montana Martha's River, Montana Mast Creek, Missouri McKee's Rock, Ohio River McNeal's Creek, Montana Medicine River, Montana Milk River, Montana Mine River, Missouri Miry Creek, North Dakota Mississippi River and Valley Missouri Breaks, Montana Missouri River and Valley Monongahela River, Pennsylvania - Virginia Moreau Creek, Missouri Moreau River, South Dakota Mount Adams, Washington Mount Hood, Oregon Mount Jefferson, Oregon (March 30, 1806) Mount Rainier, Washington Mount St. Helens, Washington Mouse River, North Dakota Multnomah River, Oregon Muskingum River, Ohio Musselshell Rapid, Columbia River New Timberland River, Washington Nightingale Creek, Missouri No Timber Creek, South Dakota Nodaway River, Iowa - Missouri North Fork, Clearwater River, Idaho Oak Creek, South Dakota Ohio River and Valley Onion Creek, North Dakota Osage River, Missouri Osage Woman's Creek, Missouri Otter Creek, Missouri Otter Creek, South Dakota Pacific Ocean Panther Creek, Montana Pelican Island, Iowa Pipestone Creek, Minnesota Platte River, Nebraska Plum Creek, Missouri Pocasse Creek, South Dakota Point Ellice, Washington Point Lewis, Washington Pompy's Pillar, Montana Pompy's Tower (July 25, 1806) Praire of the Knobs Porcupine River, Montana Portage Creek, Montana Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin Prairie of Arrows, Missouri Quawmarsh Creek, Idaho Quawmarsh flats, Idaho Quick Sand River, Oregon Rattlesnake Cliffs, Montana Reuben Creek, South Dakota Rio Colorado Rio Grande Rock Dam Creek, Montana Rocky Mountains Roloje Creek, Nebraska Rose River, Montana Ruby River, Montana Rush Creek, Missouri Saline Creek, Missouri Salmon River, Idaho Sand Creek, Missouri Sandy River, Oregon Sentinal Creek, South Dakota Sheperd's Creek, Missouri Shoshone Cove, Idaho Sioux River, South Dakota - Iowa Snake Bluff, Missouri Snake Creek, Missouri Snake River, Idaho Soldier's River, Iowa Spirit Lake, Iowa Spirit Mound, South Dakota Split Rock Creek, Missouri Stone Idol Creek, South Dakota Stone River, Iowa Strawberry Island, Columbia River Sulphur Spring Sunfish Creek, Ohio Tavern Cave Teton River, Montana Three Forks, Missouri River Tillamook Head, Oregon Tongue Point, Oregon Tongue River, Wyoming - Montana Towarnehiooks River, Oregon Tower Rock, Montana (July 16, 1805) Track Creek, Montana Traveler's Rest Creek, Montana Turf Creek, Montana Two Medicine River, Montana Valley Plain River, Montana Vermillion River, South Dakota Waller's Rifle, Ohio River Weippe Prairie, Idaho Weiser River, Idaho White Bear Islands, Montana White Brant Creek, South Dakota White Cliffs, Missouri Breaks, Montana White Stone River, South Dakota Willamette River, Oregon Willard's Creek, Montana Willow Creek, Iowa Willow Run, Montana Wilson's Riffle, Ohio River Wind River, Washington Wisdom River, Montana Woolery's Trap, Ohio River Yellowstone River Zancare Creek, Missouri