
Lewis & Clark Salt Works
N 45° 59.068 W 123° 55.914
10T E 427820 N 5092743
Quick Description: The Lewis & Clark expedition used this location to replenish their salt supply before returning to civilization.
Location: Oregon, United States
Date Posted: 8/24/2007 10:12:38 AM
Waymark Code: WM22FZ
Views: 96
Long Description:On January 2, 1806, the Salt Works was established by the three
"salt makers" of the Lewis & Clark expedition. Joseph Fields,
William Bratten, and George Gibson, who remained here until
February 20, 1806. These men, assisted at times by hunters and
packers, were able during this period to tediously extract
approximately 4 bushels of salt by boiling sea water day and night
in five metal "kettles".
The expedition had run out of salt before arrival at their
winter camp at Fort Clatsop, 10 miles to the northeast, and it was
necessary for curing meat and preparing for the return trip to
civilization.
This actual site was established by a committee of the Oregon
Historical Society in 1900, on the testimony of Jenny Michel of
Seaside, whose Clatsop Indian father remembered seeing the white
men boiling water, and had pointed out this place to her when she
was a young girl. She was born in this vicinity about 1816 and died
in 1905.