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The Journal of Jacob Fowler / Narrating an Adventure from Arkansas Through the Indian / Territory, Oklahoma, Kansas, Colorado, and New Mexico, to / the Sources of Rio Grande del Norte, 1821-22 cover

The Journal of Jacob Fowler / Narrating an Adventure from Arkansas Through the Indian / Territory, Oklahoma, Kansas, Colorado, and New Mexico, to / the Sources of Rio Grande del Norte, 1821-22

Chapter 281: DR. COUES’ WORKS ON WESTERN EXPLORATION.
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About This Book

A field journal narrates an overland expedition across the trans‑Mississippi West, offering day‑to‑day entries that describe routes, river sources, camps, landscape features, and practical travel challenges. The manuscript blends geographic observations, measurements and route notes with personal reminiscences and descriptions of settlements and encounters along the way. Editorial material supplies an introduction, commentary on provenance and legibility, and facsimiles of manuscript pages, helping readers interpret the handwriting and place the episodic, largely pragmatic account of movement through varied frontier terrain into context.


DR. COUES’ WORKS ON WESTERN EXPLORATION.

Expeditions of Zebulon Montgomery Pike.

To the Headwaters of the Mississippi River, the Interior Parts of Louisiana, Mexico and Texas, in the years of 1805-6-7. Reprinted in full from the original Philadelphia edition of 1810. With copious explanatory, geographical and scientific notes to the text, a new Memoir of Pike and an Index to the whole. By Prof. Elliott Coues, Edition limited, 3 vols., 8vo.

1,000 on fine book paper $10.00 net per set.
150 on hand-made paper $20.00 net per set.

This edition of Pike’s explorations is only second in value to the annotated journals of Lewis & Clark, by the same editor. The rearrangement by Dr. Coues of the appendices and other extraneous matter adds very greatly to its value, since in the original edition even the experienced reader has found it difficult to collate complete information on many important topics. The volumes are an important contribution to geographical and historical literature.—The Nation (3 columns).

On the whole, the new Pike must prove monumental. It will forever link its author with Pike’s fame. Its map of Mississippi sources, and the arduous voyage (of the editor) into the farthest fountains, will not let us wonder that the Minnesota Park Commissioner styled a lakelet feeding Itasca, Elliot Coues, and inscribed that name upon a boulder on that utmost shore.—American Historical Review (2½ pages).

The great merit in Dr. Coues’ notes is that they preserve the history of the localities and give credit to all the local historians and archæologists. Dr. Coues seems to have read all of the local histories and records, whether contained in books, pamphlets or even newspapers, and has given the references with great painstaking. In fact, the notes are equivalent to a bibliography.—American Antiquarian and Oriental Journal.

Dr. Coues’ new edition of “Pike’s Expeditions” is a beautiful specimen of presswork most creditable to the taste and liberality of the publisher. The editor has done the material portion of his work as successfully as has the publisher, the result is a well-digested and most readable chronicle, instead of ill-assorted bundles of information (as in the original edition). No explorer has ever been more fully aided to express himself through the ampler knowledges of the generations that come after him than in this case.—The Dial (2½ pages).

New Light on the Early History of the Greater Northwest.

The Journals of Alexander Henry (Partner of the Northwest Company), with Explorations and Life with the Fur Traders on the Red, Saskatchewan, and Columbia Rivers, 1799-1814, now first published, with which are collated the original unpublished manuscripts of David Thompson, Explorer and Geographer of the Northwest Company. The whole carefully edited with copious notes by Dr. Elliot Coues, with Maps, Index, etc. Limited edition, 3 vols., roy. 8vo,

1,000 copies, fine book paper $10.00 net per set.
100 on hand-made paper $20.00 net per set.

Dr. Coues says of this work: “No work approaching these journals in the scope, extent, variety and interest of its contents has appeared since the publication in 1801 of Sir Alexander Mackenzie’s memorable voyages, and the present work will undoubtedly take rank with that classic as a veritable mine of accurate information.” Send for complete prospectus.

“The exceeding value of the work lies in the fact that it is new. Not for a long time has a book of such great historical interest been published in this country ... it should become a cherished book in the eyes of all those who take more than a passing interest in the early history of our country.”—New York Herald.

“The claim of the publisher that few such important books as this have been issued recently, is a just one. The work is all that could be desired in every way.”—Cincinnati Commercial-Tribune.

“He (Dr. Coues) beheld in Henry that which he most desired to complete his magnificent endeavor to illuminate the world of the West during the early years of the nineteenth century.”—The Nation.

“Dr. Coues’ study and research as shown in these volumes is simply marvelous.”—New York Tribune.

“It will be seen also that Henry and Thompson to a degree overlap Lewis and Clark.”—The Dial.

“The study of the Indians was his (Henry’s) life work. Here he is keenest and most valuable.”—Baltimore Sun.


List of corrections made to the text

Page 2, removed repeated “the” (the Workes one Small Well)

Page 17, removed repeated “and” (Rich and Well timbered)

Page 34, removed repeated “on” (the main Chanel on the North Side)

Page 39, removed repeated “and” (Half a mile Wide and is offen Crosed)

Page 45, removed repeated “the” (Bareing of the three principle points)

Page 59, removed repeated “and” (He Was very frendly and Efected)

Page 64, removed repeated “the” (the Kiawa Cheef With His nation)

Page 66, removed repeated “but” (but a nomber of Squas Interfeered)

Page 68, removed repeated “the” (discovered the Indisposion)

Page 89, removed repeated “found one” (found one mair Soposed to Have been Stolen)

Page 106, removed repeated “and” (a Capten and Sixty men)

Page 130, removed repeated “this” (this the first We Have Seen)

Page 136, removed repeated “the” (We Went up the Crick about Eight miles)

Page 137, removed repeated “to” (Will not be able to Cross the mountains)

Page 142, removed repeated “Except” (Except those for Robert)

Page 151, removed repeated “of” (of Clear Watter)

Page 167, removed repeated “the” (to avoid the musketoes)

Footnote 9, changed, ironically, “mispelled” to “misspelled” (French name, no doubt misspelled)

Index, changed “Buffelo cr.” to “Buffalo cr.”

Index, changed “Mulberrry” to “Mulberry”

Index, changed “tabbe bone, tabeo” to “tabba bone, tabebo”