George Shannon - Palmyra, MO, USA
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member YoSam.
N 39° 47.957 W 091° 31.399
15S E 626419 N 4406522
After the expedition, Shannon lost his leg while escorting a Native American chief ending his military career. He then married and moved to Missouri where he became a U.S. Senator and a lawyer, before dying in 1836.
Waymark Code: WM195NT
Location: Missouri, United States
Date Posted: 12/01/2023
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Crazy4horses
Views: 1

County of marker: Marion County
Location of mark: US 61 (business)/MO 168, [Main St.], courthouse lawn, Palmyra
Marker erected by: The Missouri State Society, DAR and The Hannibal Heritage Chapter, DAR
Date marker erected: June 13, 2004

"George Shannon (1785–1836), the youngest member of the Lewis and Clark Expedition (not counting the infant Jean Baptiste Charbonneau and Lewis's dog Seaman), was born in Pennsylvania. He joined the Corps of Discovery in August 1803, as one of the three men (and Seaman) from Pittsburgh recruited by Lewis as he was waiting for the completion of the voyage's vessels in the city.

"On August 26, 1804, he was sent to retrieve two pack horses; he was separated from the party for sixteen days and nearly starved, as he went without food for twelve days except for some grapes and rabbits. At first he thought he was behind the expedition, so he sped up thinking he could catch up. Then, getting hungry, he went downstream to look for a trading party he could stay with. Finally John Colter was sent to find him.

"Shannon got lost again August 6, 1805, when the expedition was at the Three Forks. He was dispatched up a fork the party had named Wisdom (the middle fork was named Jefferson and the placid fork, Philanthropy). He rejoined the party after three days by backtracking to the forks and following the trail of the others.

"In 1807 he was with a party led by Nathaniel Pryor that was attempting to return the Mandan chief Sheheke to his people. He was wounded in an encounter with the Arikaras and lost a leg; he would eventually receive a government pension.

"In 1810 he assisted in Nicholas Biddle's history of the expedition. Later, Clark asked him to join a fur trading enterprise, but Shannon chose to study law instead. By 1818 he had a law practice in Lexington, Kentucky, and later ran for senator from Missouri. He was buried in Palmyra, Missouri.

"His brothers were Congressman Thomas Shannon (Ohio politician) and Ohio/Kansas Governor Wilson Shannon." ~ Wikipedia

DAR Chapter: Hannibal Heritage Chapter & Missouri State Society DAR

Date Placed: 06/13/2004

Inscription:
GEORGE SHANNON
1787- 1836
This marker commemorates George Shannon
The youngest member of the Corps of
Discovery, on the occasion of the
Bicentennial of the Lewis and Clark
Expedition

He died in Palmyra, Missouri, while on legal
business, August 30, 1836, and is buried one
mile north of Palmyra in the Messey Mill
Cemetery

Marker Dedicated on June 13, 2004
BY
The Missouri State Society DAR
and The Hannibal Heritage Chapter DAR


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