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    The New Found Journal of Charles Floyd: A Sergeant Under Captains Lewis and Clark (1894) (English Edition)

    Por James Davie Butler

    Sobre

    James Davie Butler (1815 - 1905) was a professor at Norwich university who in 1894 published with an introduction the newly found journal of Charles Floyd who was a sergeant with the Louis and Clark Expedition.


    On the 3rd of February, 1893, the journal of Sergeant Floyd came to light in the manuscript collections of the Wisconsin Historical Society at Madison. This book was found without being sought for, and so was the greater surprise of The Secretary of that Society, Reuben G. Thwaites, who was examining a high pile of note-books written by the earliest Secretary, Lyman C. Draper, while journeying in searches for historical material.

    Charles Floyd (1782 – 1804) was a United States explorer, a non-commissioned officer in the U.S. Army, and quartermaster in the Lewis and Clark Expedition. A native of Kentucky, he was a son of Robert Clark Floyd, a nephew of James John Floyd, a cousin of Virginia governor John Floyd, and possibly a relative of William Clark. He was one of the first men to join the expedition, and the only person to die on the expedition.

    While exploring the Louisiana Purchase with Lewis and Clark, he took ill at the end of July 1804. On July 31, Floyd wrote in his diary, "I am very sick and have been for sometime but have recovered my health again." However, this apparent recovery was soon followed by a severe turn for the worse. William Clark described Floyd's death as one "with a great deal of composure" and that before Floyd died he said to Clark, "I am going away. Please write me a letter."

    A funeral was held and Floyd was buried on a bluff overlooking the Missouri River. The expedition named the location Floyd's Bluff in his honor. They camped that night at the mouth of Floyd River, "about 30 yards wide, a beautiful evening.--"

    Clark diagnosed the condition which led to Floyd's demise as bilious colic, though modern doctors and historians believe Floyd's death was more likely to have been caused by a ruptured appendix. The brief "recovery" Floyd described may have represented the temporary relief afforded by the bursting of the organ, which would have been followed by a fatal peritonitis. If that were the case, because there was no known cure for appendicitis at that time, he would have been no better off had he been with the best physicians of the day.
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