Most of the men in the Overland…
April 1811 CE
Most of the men in the Overland Party are engaged as hunters, interpreters, guides and Canadian Voyagers.
The party also includes one woman, Marie Dorion, an Iowan Indian and wife of Pierre Dorion, and their two young sons.
Wilson Price Hunt, a St. Louis businessman who has no outback experience, leads the overland party to the Columbia River.
Hunt makes a number of decisions which, in hindsight, are disastrous to the Astor Expedition.
However, those mistakes are to lead to the expedition's (and the company’s return expedition under Robert Stuart) most famous discoveries.
Hunt had taken the unusual step of starting his expedition just before the winter as he left St. Louis on October 21, 1810.
The expedition travels four hundred and fifty miles up the Missouri River before setting up winter camp on Nodaway Island at the mouth of Nodaway River in Andrew County, Missouri just north of St. Joseph, Missouri.
Hunt's expedition breaks the Nodaway winter camp on April 21, 1811.