and the river was descended a few miles—"Traveled till 8 o'clock in mud and water," wrote Bowman—before a camping-spot was found.
On the morning of the eighteenth the morning gun at Fort Sackville (Vincennes) was heard. The Wabash was reached at two o'clock in the afternoon, but no boats could be found by the parties of searchers sent out on rafts and in a canoe. Affairs were growing desperate, and the "very quiet but hungry" men set to work building canoes. Messengers were sent to hurry on "The Willing" but did not find her. "No provisions of any sort," writes Bowman on the nineteenth, "now for two days. Hard fortune!" On the twentieth, as work on the canoes advanced, a canoe containing five Frenchmen from Vincennes was captured, and Clark learned that he was not yet discovered. On the twenty-first the army began to be ferried across the Wabash, "to a small hill called [Mammelle?]." The crossing-place cannot be determined with precision. It was below the mouth of the Embarras, and not lower on the Wabash than a mile and a half above