Historical Figure

Silas Goodrich

Private Silas Goodrich was the Corps of Discovery's most accomplished fisherman, consistently providing fresh fish to supplement the expedition's diet of game meat. Lewis frequently praised Goodrich's skill in his journal entries, noting the various species he caught including cutthroat trout, which were new to science. Goodrich caught fish at nearly every major waterway the expedition encountered, from the Missouri to the Columbia. His catches contributed to the expedition's important ichthyological discoveries and scientific documentation of western fish species.

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Biography

Silas Goodrich was the expedition’s most accomplished fisherman, frequently catching fish that supplemented the party’s meat-heavy diet. Lewis praised his angling skills repeatedly in the journals.

Goodrich’s catches provided important scientific specimens as well as food. He was the first to catch cutthroat trout, sauger, and goldeye for the expedition’s collections. At the Great Falls of the Missouri, Goodrich caught trout “from sixteen to twenty three inches in length” that Lewis carefully described and measured.

After the expedition, Goodrich’s trail grows cold. He is believed to have contracted syphilis — a disease that afflicted several expedition members who had contact with Native women — and may have died from its effects within a few years of the journey’s end.

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