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History of Early Steamboat Navigation on the Missouri River, Volume 1 (of 2) / Life and Adventures of Joseph La Barge cover

History of Early Steamboat Navigation on the Missouri River, Volume 1 (of 2) / Life and Adventures of Joseph La Barge

Chapter 22: Transcriber’s Notes
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About This Book

The book presents the life and memoirs of a long-serving Missouri River pilot, tracing ancestry, youth, and rise in the fur trade before chronicling decades of steamboat navigation on the river. It interweaves personal voyages and incidents—disease aboard boats, seasonal ice break-up, head-of-navigation achievements, and encounters at frontier posts—with descriptive chapters on river channels, snags, boat types, and piloting techniques. The narrative situates individual experience within broader economic and social change, showing how river transport enabled trade, military movements, and frontier settlement while charting the expansion and eventual decline of steamboat commerce.

Transcriber’s Notes

Old English lettering on the pages preceding the Table of Contents is represented here in boldface.

Punctuation, hyphenation, and spelling were made consistent when a predominant preference was found in the original book; otherwise they were not changed.

Simple typographical errors were corrected; unbalanced quotation marks were remedied when the change was obvious, and otherwise left unbalanced.

Illustrations in this eBook have been positioned between paragraphs and outside quotations. In versions of this eBook that support hyperlinks, the page references in the List of Illustrations lead to the corresponding illustrations.

Running page headers are shown here as Sidenotes, usually positioned just above the paragraph they summarize. When such Sidenotes summarize footnotes, they are positioned above the paragraphs that referenced those footnotes.

This is Volume I of a two-volume set. The Index for both volumes is at the end of Volume II, and that volume also is available at Project Gutenberg.

Page 196: “drouth” (drought) was printed that way, and in use in the 1800s.

Page 206: “5 1-2 o’clock” was printed that way.