Traveling Right – Making Salt Lewis and Clark Style

Prefaced by Jan Jackson

Marie Antoinette would have said, “Let them eat salt,” but all you can do at this event is watch them make it Lewis and Clark style. If you are going to be in the area, it is a great thing to do. Remember, it isn’t the miles traveled or the money spent that makes a holiday a holiday. This one is free, you’ll learn something and it’s fun.

Press Release:

                                                                                                          

Lewis and Clark Salt Makers

                                                                          2021 Dates TBA

 

What do you do when you run out of salt – and the nearest store is more than 2,000 miles away? The same thing Lewis and Clark did.

The supply of much needed salt, used to preserve meat and add flavor to meals, was almost exhausted as the members of the Lewis & Clark expedition began to prepare for their arduous journey home. So the members of the Corps of North Western Discovery did the only thing they could:  make their own salt.

On December 28, 1805, Captains Meriwether Lewis and William Clark sent forth a special detachment from their winter quarters at Fort Clatsop. Five men travelled overland from the Fort to the coast, searching for the best location for making salt. On January 1, 1806, the fifth day of their search, these men found the   perfect spot and set up camp on the  beach of present day Seaside, Oregon. They proceeded to make salt by boiling sea water for nearly two months, all while enduring the wet winter weather, before they returned to Fort Clatsop.

The reenactment of this event has become a tradition of the Seaside Museum. It  continues with third person interpretation provided by members of the Pacific Northwest Living Historians (PNLH).  PNLH interpreters will create and share the experience of the Lewis & Clark exploration group, bringing to life the salt camp which those explorers established 214 years ago.

Lewis & Clark Salt Makers will take place on the beach west of the Avenue U and Prom intersection this fall – dates TBA.

Visitors to the program will enter the camp and find members of the PNLH busy making salt, as they boil sea water over a fire just as the men of the Lewis and Clark expedition did in 1806. The interpreters will also share the history and stories of the legendary expedition with everyone who comes to the beach.

Lewis and Clark Salt Makers is a free interactive learning opportunity for the whole family. This event is sponsored by the Seaside Museum and presented by the PNLH.  The project is made possible through a grant from the City of Seaside Tourism Advisory Committee, funded by room tax dollars.  The program is also supported by the Oregon Parks and Recreation Department, Seaside Public Works Department, and The Tides Vacation Condos.

For more information, call the Seaside Museum at (503) 738-7065.

Travel Right Photo by Shutterstock

 

Preserving Seaside’s History since 1974, the Seaside Museum and Historical Society is a non-profit educational institution located at 570 Necanicum Drive, Seaside.  

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