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ZEBULON See also: American explorer and soldier, was See also: born in Lbmberton (now a See also: part of Trenton), New See also: Jersey, on the 5th of See also: January 1779, son of Zebulon Pike (1751-1834), an officer in the American army
.
He entered his See also: father's See also: company as a cadet about 1794, and became an ensign (or second See also: lieutenant) in 1799 and first lieu-See also: tenant in the same See also: year
.
On the 9th of See also: August 18o5 he started with twenty men from St See also: Louis to explore the
See also: head-See also: waters of the See also: Mississippi
.
At See also: Prairie du Chien he met some Chippewa chiefs and induced them to expel the See also: whisky-traders among them and to make See also: peace with the See also: Sioux; at the Falls of St Anthony (See also: Sept
.
23) he bought a See also: tract g m. square at the mouth of the St Croix for a fort; and at Little Falls (in the See also: middle of' See also: October) he built a stockade, where he See also: left seven men
.
He reached See also: Leech Lake (" Lake La Sang Sue "), which he called " the See also: main source of the Mississippi," on the 1st of See also: February r8o6; went 30 M. farther to See also: Cass Lake (" Red See also: Cedar "); and, after working against See also: British influences among the See also: Indians, turned back, and went down the Mississippi from Dean Creek to St Louis, arriving on the 3oth of See also: April
.
In IS0 he was
ordered to restore to their homes 50 Osages, redeemed by the See also: United States See also: government from Potawatami, and to explore the country
.
He started on the 15th of See also: July; and went See also: north along the See also: Missouri and the Osage into the See also: present See also: state of Kansas and probably to the Republican See also: river in the See also: south of the present See also: Nebraska, where on the 29th of See also: September he held a See also: grand council of the Pawnees
.
Then (early in October), turning nearly south, he marched to the See also: Arkansas river, which he reached on the 14th of October, and up which (after the 28th with only 16 men) he went to the Royal See also: Gorge (Dec
.
7), having first seen the See also: mountain called in his honour Pike's See also: Peak on the 23rd of See also: November; and then went north-west, probably up Oil Creek from See also: Canon City
.
In searching for the Red river he came to the South Platte, marched through South See also: Park, left it by See also: Trout Creek pass, struck over to the Arkansas, which he thought was the Red River for which he was searching, and, going south and south-west, came to the Rio Grande del Norte (about where Alamosa, Conejos county, See also: Colorado, is now) on the 3oth of January 1807
.
There on the 26th of February he and a small number of his men were taken prisoners by See also: Spanish authorities, who sent him first to See also: Santa Fe, then to See also: Chihuahua to General Salcedo, and by a roundabout way to the American frontier, where he was released on the 1st of July 1807
.
He was promoted captain (August 18o6), major (May 18o8), lieutenant-colonel (Dec . 1809) and colonel (July 1812) . In 18o8 he tried in vain to get an appropriation from Congress for himself and his men . He was militarySee also: agent in New See also: Orleans in 1809–1810, was deputy quartermaster-general in April–July 1812, and was in active service in the War of 1812 as adjutant and inspector-general in the
See also: campaign against See also: York (now See also: Toronto), See also: Canada, and in the attack on York on the 27th of April 1813 was in immediate command of the troops in See also: action and was killed by a piece of See also: rock which See also: fell on him when the British garrison in its retreat set fire to the See also: magazine
.
His Account of an Expedition to the See also: Sources of the Mississippi and through the Western Parts of See also: Louisiana . and a Tour through the Interior Parts of New See also: Spain was published at See also: Philadelphia in 181o; was reprinted and rearranged in See also: London in 1811; and was published in a French version in See also: Paris in 1812, and a Dutch version at See also: Amsterdam in 1812-1813
.
The See also: standard edition with memoir and notes by See also: Elliott Cones was published in three volumes in New York in 1895
.
Some of Pike's papers taken from him in Mexico are now in the Mexican archives (Seccion de Asuntos Internacionales caxa 1817-1824), and the more important were published by H
.
E
.
Bolton in the American See also: Historical Review, (1907-1908), xiii
.
798-827
.
See the sketch by See also: Henry
See also: Whiting in vol. v., series 2, of Jared See also: Sparks's Library of American Biography
.
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