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About the Lewis & Clark Exploratory Center:
Who We Are | Our History | Our Vision/The Exploratory Center

Our Vision/ The Exploratory Center

Meriwether Lewis The Lewis and Clark Exploratory Center of Virginia celebrates and explores the original ideas and historic roots of the Lewis and Clark Expedition. Indeed, the expedition “started here” with Thomas Jefferson and his childhood education and experiences; Meriwether Lewis, who was an Albemarle County native, Jefferson neighbor and Jefferson’s presidential secretary; William Clark, a Virginia native who was the younger brother of Albemarle native and Revolutionary War hero, George Rogers Clark; James Monroe, who lived within sight of Jefferson’s Monticello and helped negotiate the Louisiana Purchase; James Madison, who resided at Montpelier in nearby Orange County and was U.S. Secretary of State during the time of the Lewis and Clark Expedition; and many Corps of Discovery members, including York, John Shields, Reuben and John Field, with Virginia roots.

Today, the Center has an historic and attractive site on the Rivanna River, at Darden Towe Park, just northeast of the city. The site is ideal for a building, a partially constructed keelboat and a pirogue – similar to the boats used on the expedition -- an annual festival and activities for children and adults. The Center envisions a future that will engage minds and hands in exploring the Lewis and Clark Expedition and its origins. Watch this space for developments.

William McDonough + Partners and Nelson Byrd Landscape Architects are conducting site development. The site has a multitude of historic and environmental elements, and numerous places in the existing woods lend themselves to an exploration of “living off the land” -- from both the voyager and native perspectives. Development is in the discovery stage for the Center’s board members, who agree with the architect that: “There are possibilities of this Center telling fundamental stories about not just peoples, plants and animals, but about geologies, soils, water and climate. This is what makes this site so absolutely terrific – it has so many of these elements in vivid form and presence.”

William Clark


William McDonough + Partners and Nelson Byrd Landscape Architects are working with the Board on site development. The project is in an exciting stage of working with a site that has a multitude of historic and environmental elements. For example, many places in the existing woods may lend themselves to an exploration of "Living off the Land" both from the voyager and native perspective. There are also portions of the site that spring to mind as showing Lewis and Clark as natural historians. All discussions are tentative and in the discovery stage for the Board at this time, but all agree with the architect who wrote, "There are possibilities of this Center telling fundamental stories about not just peoples, plants and animals, but about geologies, soils, water and climate. This is what makes this site so absolutely terrific -- it has so many of these elements in vivid form and presence."


Exploratory Center News:


Alexandria Searls is the LCEC Executive Director. Searls is a writer, media producer, and teacher. Her previous experience includes founding the Vinegar Hill Film Festival, which is held annually in Charlottesville.



Live Arts Theater

The Center will be designed to:

  • Focus on the Virginian experience with earlier expeditions to western Virginia and the West and on Jefferson's vision in proposing the westward expansion.

  • Explore the education, training and preparation of Lewis and Clark as leaders, and the character, personalities and contributions of members of the Corps of Discovery, especially a slave named York and a Shoshone woman named Sacagawea.

  • Engage visitors in touching, using and imagining the challenges posed by the tools, keelboats, and other equipment used during the journey and explore the plants, herbs and wildlife discovered, and research and methods used.

  • Illustrate the differences between the American East and West in terms of topography, plants, wildlife, and the diversity of Native American tribes.

  • Orient visitors to the entire Lewis and Clark Expedition, including important preparation at other sites in the East, such as Philadelphia, Harper's Ferry and Pittsburgh, as well as the Trail in the West and its many centers, museums and exhibits.
Dugout

The Visitor Experience

Through an interactive environment, visitors of all ages will experience the excitement and rediscovery of the expedition. The Center will feature focus areas, such as:
  • The creation of the expedition with Jefferson, Monroe, Madison, Lewis and Clark;

  • Leadership, training and decision-making on the expedition: The beginnings of American democracy;

  • The character of the Corps itself, which included an African-American slave, York, and an Native American, Sacagawea;

  • The Native American role in the success of the expedition;

  • Science and technology as part of the exploration, including medicinal herbs, plants, wildlife, geography and cartography;

  • Interactive displays showing Lewis' and Clark's navigation training in the Army, and Lewis' botanical and medical training in Philadelphia.

  • Daily life on the expedition.

The Center will tell these stories through the following means:

  • electronic maps of geographical and historical highlights;
  • hands-on replicas of tepees, boats, huts;
  • films and videotapes;
  • real time videoconferencing and Internet communication with Lewis and Clark centers across the West;
  • opportunities to plan a trip West or to enjoy a virtual trip through travel on the Internet.

The Lewis and Clark Exploratory Center of Virginia will contain a central exhibit area, educational/classroom space, a theater, and other visitor amenities.



Corps of Discovery
The story of the Corps of Discovery presages the unfolding of the American dream of democracy over the next 200 years - an ideal toward which we are still working. Although blacks, women, and Indians were not considered equals, a slave named York and a young Shoshone woman named Sacagawea played significant roles and participated fully as members of the Corps.

 


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