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York
One of the most fascinating yet enigmatic
figures of the Lewis and Clark Expedition was William Clark's slave
York. As with many members of the expedition, little information
survives about York to present his life in a great amount of detail.
The presence of York on the expedition also raises many philosophical
questions about African-American heritage and the treatment of African
Americans throughout our history.
Slave
| Servant | Caregiver
| Hunter | Curiosity
| Scout | Vote
Civilization | Freedom
| Cholera | Bibliography
Slave
The only African American on the
expedition, York was also the only member who had no choice about
whether or not he would go. As a slave, he was bound to do what
he was told by his master, yet as a member of the Corps of Discovery,
he had almost total freedom and participated in one of the seminal
events of American history. York was a black man and a slave, and
his return to Euro-American civilization carried dire consequences
not only for York, but also in metaphorical terms for considering
the role of African Americans in a society founded on the principles
of the Declaration of Independence. Racial bias of the Jim Crow
Era (1890s-1920s) caused historians to dwell upon York's sexual
prowess with Native American women and his role as the "buffoon"
of the party. Nothing in the journal accounts corroborates
this information, and in fact the record refutes it.
The best historical information seems to
indicate that York was owned from the time of his birth by the Clark
family. It was said that York and William Clark grew up together,
and were about the same age. That would mean that York was born
in Virginia about 1770, and was roughly 34 years old at the time
the expedition began in 1804. York was the son of Old York and Rose,
slaves who had also been owned by the Clark family from birth. William
Clark inherited York when his father John died in 1799. John Clark's
will (in the Clark family papers at the Missouri Historical Society
in St. Louis) also stipulates that William Clark inherited Old York,
Rose, two children named Nancy and Juba, and three "old Negroes"
named Jane, Cupid and Harry. A list of William Clark's property
dated July 5, 1802 (also at MHS) included "5 old Negroes, 7 above
16 yrs. old, 3 under 16 yrs. old and 3 children."
It was said that York was a large man, a
little overweight, and very strong. At the time of the expedition
both master and slave lived in Clarksville, Indiana territory, across
the Ohio River from Louisville, Kentucky. We know from letters written
by William Clark to his older brother Jonathan (discovered in the
1980s and owned by the Filson Club of Louisville, Kentucky) that
York had a wife and possibly a family prior to the departure of
the expedition. His wife lived in the Louisville area.
Few mentions of York occur in the journals,
although he receives more attention than many of the other enlisted
privates who went along. He was first mentioned on December 26,
1803 as working on constructing the fort and huts at Camp Dubois
in Illinois. On April 7, 1804, York traveled with Lewis and Clark
and one other man to St. Louis for a ball. York is not mentioned
again until June 5, 1804, when he "Swam to the Sand bar to gather
greens for our Dinner and returned with a Sufficient quantity [of]
wild Creases [NB: Cresses] or Teng [NB: Tongue] grass."

Servant
One of the more disturbing
aspects of York's expedition status is that he is never referenced
as a slave in the journals, always as a "servant." Although not
uncommon at the time, the distinction between the two terms is very
great to modern eyes. There was also a distinction in the early
19th century, for a servant is a wage worker who earns money for
his services, and is free to resign and seek other employment when
he chooses. A slave, especially under the system of English Law
as adopted in America, was almost certainly condemned to slavery
for life, with few chances for obtaining freedom. All children of
a female slave were automatically considered to be slaves themselves.
One wonders about York's status in terms
of the expedition group. He certainly was not seen as a full-fledged
member of the group at first, but merely as Clark's slave, the only
"servant" along on the expedition, the only man not working for
wages and the only one who could not expect a reward of land and
cash at the successful completion of the mission.
Perhaps this status of York was shown most
clearly on June 20, 1804, when Clark recorded that "York [was] very
near losing his Eyes by one of the men throwing Sand at him in fun
& received into his eyes." This type of horseplay was rare on the
expedition, almost non-existent, if we are to believe the small
number of accounts which mention it. Did the man who threw sand
at York feel he could do so because York could not defend himself,
since he was a slave? Did some of the men think they could bully
York because he could not fight back? Perhaps the incident was truly
just high-spirited horseplay that resulted in an accident, or perhaps
Clark forbade any further trifling with York. The journals are silent
in regard to this matter. It is interesting that this was one of
the few times in the journals that Clark did not refer to York as
"my servant," but mentioned him by name, perhaps revealing the concern
he felt for York as a human being who had been injured.

Caregiver
That same concern was exhibited
by York for another human being on August 19, 1804, when Sgt. Charles
Floyd lay near death. Clark recorded that "Every man is attentive
to him (York prlly)." Lewis and Clark Journal editor Gary Moulton
felt that the best guess as to the meaning of this phrase was that
Clark meant to say "York principally." York was later a primary
caregiver to Sacagawea and other sick members of the expedition.

Hunter
During the course of the
expedition York went from packing freshly killed animals on his
back, as when he carried a deer for Clark on August 24, 1804, to
carrying a gun himself. This was unusual; in fact, most colonial
and state laws in the United States forbade the arming of slaves.
Yet throughout most of the expedition, beginning for certain on
September 9, 1804, York was one of the hunters who obtained meat
for the group. Clark recorded that "In the evening after the boat
landed, I Directed my Servant York with me to kill a Buffalo near
the boat from a number then Scattered in the plains." In fact, Clark
credits York with killing two buffalo that day. On September 19,
1804, Clark mentioned that "York my Servant killed a buck" and these
references continue throughout the remainder of the journals.

Curiosity
Another aspect of York's participation
in the expedition was as an object of curiosity to the Indian tribes
that the men encountered. Clark recorded on October 9, 1804 that
"The Indians [are] much astonished at my black servant and call
him the big medicine. This nation never saw a black man before."
The following day Clark repeated this information, continuing by
saying that York "made himself more terrible in their view than
I wished him to do, as I am told, telling them that before I caught
him he was wild & lived upon people, [that] young children was very
good eating. Showed them his strength &c. &c." "All flocked around
him & examined him from top to toe. He carried on the joke and made
himself more terrible than we wished him to do." Sgt. John Ordway
added that "All the nation made a great deal of him. The children
would follow after him, & if he turned towards them they would run
from him & hollow as if they were terrified, & afraid of him." Altogether,
it seems that York had a great deal of fun with the Indian peoples
he encountered. They did not look upon him as a slave or as a mere
man, but as an extraordinary creature more interesting and elevated
than any of his companions.

Scout
As the expedition went on, York
was selected to accompany groups of soldiers on scouting missions.
On June 3, 1805, as the captains investigated two rivers to find
which was the true Missouri, Clark selected some of his best men
to accompany him on the reconnaissance. Clark chose Reubin & Joseph
Field, Sergt. Patrick Gass, George Shannon and York to go with him.
Similarly, on July 18, 1805, as Clark scouted further up the Missouri,
York once more accompanied him as a selected member of his small
group. It seems that by the second year of the expedition York was
a full-fledged member of the Corps of Discovery, participating in
dangerous missions, carrying a gun, hunting for food, and ministering
to the sick.
In fact, York was allowed to go about entirely
on his own, hunting for the group. On June 29, 1805 at Great Falls,
Montana, York separated from Clark, Charbonneau, Sacagawea and her
baby "in pursuit of some buffalo." A sudden heavy rainstorm came
up which forced Clark and the Charbonneaus into a ravine for cover,
which turned out to be a mistake, since the rains produced a gully
washer of epic proportions, nearly drowning them all. Emerging back
up on the level plain above the ravine, "they found the black man,
York, in search of them. York had separated from them a little while
before the storm, and had not seen them enter the ravine. When this
gust came on he returned in search of them, & not being able to
find them for some time was much alarmed." York's basic humanity,
the care and concern he felt for other human beings, are revealed
in passages such as these, and repeated throughout the journals.
By August 16, 1805, York had become not only
a real member of the Corps of Discovery, but somewhat of a legend,
one of the people who composed the group that made it unique and
special, and that strengthened it, both in terms of group dynamics
and in terms of the group's appearance to outsiders. When the party
talked with Indian tribes about what made their group so special,
what was magic and different about the Corps, they inevitably mentioned
York. Lewis and Clark recorded that "Some of the party had also
told the Indians that we had a man with us who was black and had
short curling hair. This had excited their curiosity very much,
and they seemed quite as anxious to see this monster as they were
the merchandise which we had to barter for their horses." On August
17, 1805, after actually meeting York, the Shoshone were recorded
as viewing the expedition as astonishing, "the appearance of the
men, their arms, the canoes, our manner of working them, the black
man York and the sagacity of my dog were equally objects of admiration."

Vote
But lest anyone feel that York
was being treated more as a zoological specimen than a man, the
apogee of his involvement with the Corps would dispel all such thoughts.
This came on November 23, 1805, when a vote was taken to decide
where the Corps would spend the winter. Each member of the group
was given an equal vote, including York and Sacagawea. This incident
may in fact be the first recorded instance of an African American
being allowed to vote in American history. York had not only become
a member of the Corps of Discovery, but had also been allowed to
participate in the democratic process. He had tasted the American
dream.

Civilization
But it was not to last. When the
expedition returned to St. Louis in September 1806 they were national
heroes. Land bounties, extra pay, and other rewards awaited them.
One would think that for Clark's "servant" there might be some reward,
too. If not money, land or fame, what about the one thing that we
all prize and value above everything else, the concept upon which
the United States was founded - freedom?
Recent information has given us more knowledge
about York and his life after the expedition. An important discovery
made in 1988 brought to light a series of letters written by William
Clark to his brother Jonathan in Louisville, Kentucky. The information
in these new letters had not been discovered when Robert Betts wrote
his book, In Search of York (1985), which was then the most detailed
source of information on York. The Clark letters sadly related that
York was not freed upon his return from the western expedition in
1806. And one of the letters complicated the story even further.
In a letter written from Fort Mandan in April 1805, Clark mentioned
that York was sending two buffalo robes back downriver, one for
"his wife and one for Ben." This statement clarified once and for
all that York was a married man when he went west in 1804. Few of
the expedition members were married, and it was not suspected that
York had a wife before he set out for the west until the discovery
of this letter.

Freedom
Trouble began between Clark
and York after the expedition, when Clark decided to settle permanently
in St. Louis after his marriage to Julia Hancock in 1808. Apparently,
York asked Clark for his freedom, based upon his good services during
the expedition and citing his wish to live with his wife in Kentucky.
Clark refused to manumit York due to financial difficulties. York
did not want to be separated from his wife, who was owned by another
man, and pleaded with Clark to return to the Louisville area. But
Clark was stubborn, and did not want to let York go, saying that
he required York's services in St. Louis.
Clark's letters to his brother Jonathan reveal
that he became increasingly irritated by York's attitude. In November
1808, Clark wrote that he would let York go to Louisville only for
a limited period of a few weeks so that he might visit his wife,
but he would not permit York to stay in Louisville and hire himself
out. Since Clark felt that York was being disobedient, he also threatened
to hire York out to a severe master in St. Louis until he changed
his ways. Clark complained in May 1809 that York had returned from
Louisville and was "insolent and sulky. I gave him a Severe trouncing
the other Day and he has much mended Sence. Could he be hired for
any thing at or near Louisville[?] I think if he was hired there
a while to a Severe Master he would See the difference and do better."
Apparently, Clark even had York jailed for a time because of his
behavior. A system of punishments, followed by York's "improved"
behavior for short periods of time, sounded more like the old-fashioned
discipline of a child than the way a grown man would be treated.
We know that York was finally sent by Clark to Louisville and hired
out to a demanding master for at least two years. Then, the owners
of York's wife and family made plans to move to Natchez, Tennessee,
which made York long to be back in the care of Clark.
York was eventually granted his freedom by
Clark after 1816, and set up in a drayage business (wagons and teams
which hauled goods from place to place). On November 14, 1815, Clark
and John Hite Clark entered into a business agreement to purchase
and operate a wagon and team in the Louisville area; the driver
of this wagon was York.

Cholera
Clark told the author Washington
Irving that York died of cholera in Tennessee sometime before 1832.
His business had failed and it was reported that he was returning
to St. Louis to be reunited with Clark at the time of his death.
Some have theorized about and even repeated the legend that York
traveled west after he obtained his freedom, and lived once more
with the Indian tribes who had treated him so specially. There is
no basis in any recorded history for this story, but perhaps it
is true metaphorically. It is easy to think that as York worked
in drudgery on the Louisville or Natchez levee carting freight from
boat to boat, that his mind turned often to the fantasy of being
once more in the west, once more free to roam the plains with gun
in hand.
Unfortunately, York was not immediately freed
after the Lewis and Clark expedition for his good services, and
it took six or seven long years before Clark finally let him go.
York's tale is perhaps one of the saddest of the biographies of
expedition members. Like so many other African Americans throughout
history, he was held back not for lack of talents or ability, but
merely because of the color of his skin.

Bibliography
Betts, Robert B. In Search
of York: The Slave Who Went to the Pacific with Lewis and Clark.
Boulder, CO: Colorado Associated University Press, 1985.
Clarke, Charles G. The Men of the Lewis
and Clark Expedition. Glendale, CA: Arthur H. Clark Co., 1970.
Jackson, Donald, ed. Letters of the Lewis
and Clark Expedition, with Related Documents, 1783-1854. Urbana:
University of Illinois Press, 1962.
Moulton, Gary E., ed. The Journals of
the Lewis and Clark Expedition. Lincoln: University of Nebraska
Press, especially Volume 2, with a biographical sketch of York.
Ronda, James P. Lewis and Clark Among
the Indians. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1984.
The letters of William Clark to his brother
Jonathan are currently being edited by James Holmberg of Louisville,
Kentucky for inclusion in a book. Only excerpts have been released
to the public thus far. The greatest amount of information may be
found in "'I Wish You to See & Know All,' The Recently Discovered
Letters of William Clark to Jonathan Clark" by James Holmberg, Curator
of Manuscripts, the Filson Club, in We Proceeded On, November
1992.

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