Benjamin Edwards Papers
1819-1827
(0.25 linear feet)

B Ed9

© American Philosophical Society
105 South Fifth Street * Philadelphia, PA 19106-3386

American Philosophical Society

105 South Fifth Street
Philadelphia, PA 19106-3386
Table of contents Abstract
Benjamin Edwards was a minor figure on the Stephen H. Long Expedition to the Rocky Mountains. His six letters addressed to his father Oliver Edwards briefly mention the expedition. His letters also discuss his life in Louisiana after the expedition working on the Steamboat Hope and later as overseer of slaves in a sawmill.
Background note
Little is known about Benjamin Edwards. He was a member of the Stephen Harriman Long Expedition in charge of scientific explorations between the Mississippi River and the Rocky Mountains. Long designed and supervised the construction of a steamboat, the Western Engineer, that was to carry the scientific team, that included William Baldwim, Titian R. Peale, Thomas Say, and Samuel Seymour, up the Mississippi River. Shortly after commencing the journey on 5 May 1819, the expedition encountered problems with the steamboats design and machinery, a lack of efficient fuel, and the muddy waters of the Missouri River, all of which slowed progress.

On 17 September the steamboat arrived as Fort Lisa, a trading fort of the Missouri Fur Company about five miles below Council Bluffs. The Long expedition selected a spot between Fort Lisa and Council Bluff to establish "Engineer Cantonment", their winter quarters. After a few months the Cantonment was completed and Major Long returned to the east coast. He returned the following May with orders from the War Department to cease work along the Missouri and turn instead to exploring the Platte River and its sources. The expediton left their winter quarters on 6 June 1820.

Whether Edwards joined this epedition or not is unknown. By August 1822 he had left government service and found employment on the steamboat Hope in New Orleans. Always hoping to go home to his family in Wear, New Hampshire, Edwards continued to anticipate that he would receive the $850 dollars owed to him by the U.S. Government for is services on the Long expedition that would enable him to return to New Hampshire. While waiting, Edwards was employed at a sawmill in Alexandria Louisiana where he oversaw slaves. By 1827 the money had still not arrived and feeling that it never would Edwards settled in New Orleans.


Scope and content
The Benjamin Edwards Papers contains six letters written from Benjamin Edwards to his father, Oliver Edwards, from 1819 to 1827. As a member of the Stephen H. Long expedition to the Rocky Mountains, Edwards briefly describes his experiences of wintering at Council Bluff, problems with the steamboat, and the hard task of getting paid by the government for his services on the expedition. By August 1822, Edwards had left the employment of the government and found work on the steamboat Hope in New Orleans and later at a sawmill on the Mississippi River.

Administrative information
Restrictions
None.

Provenance
Acquired, 1957.

Preferred citation
Cite as: Benjamin Edwards Papers, American Philosophical Society.

Processing information
Recatalogued by Leigh McCuen, June 2003.

Added entries
Subjects
  • Exploration
  • Stephen H. Long Expedition to the Rocky Mountains (1819-1820)
  • West (U.S.)-Description and travel
  • Contributors
  • Edwards, Benjamin
  • Edwards, Oliver
  • Long, Stephen Harriman, 1784-1864
  • Contact information
    American Philosophical Society
    105 South Fifth Street
    Philadelphia, PA 19106-3386

    [http://www.amphilsoc.org/]

    ©6/2003


    Detailed inventory

    Edwards, Benjamin, ALS to Oliver Edwards 1819 November 20 3 p

    Edwards, Benjamin, AL to Oliver Edwards 1822 March 21 1 p

    Edwards, Benjamin, ALS to Oliver Edwards 1822 August 11 2 p

    Edwards, Benjamin, ALS to Oliver Edwards 1823 March 27 1 p

    Edwards, Benjamin, ALS to Oliver Edwards 1824 March 1 3 p

    Edwards, Benjamin, ALS to Oliver Edwards 1827 September 9 2 p