Bone Hunter
Prof. James Starrs digs up legends so he can talk about how they really died. And even if he doesn't find out for sure, he can still talk.
Cover Story
Meriwether Lewis shot himself twice in the early morning dark of Oct. 11, 1809. First he shot himself in the forehead with one pistol, then in the chest with another. But that didn't do the trick. For hours, he cried out for water and mumbled unintelligibly. Finally, he sliced at his flesh with a razor blade until he bled to death.
At the time, Lewis was already an American hero. Just five years before, he'd led the famed Lewis and Clark trek to the Pacific Northwest. He'd trailblazed 4,000 miles to reach the ocean, thrashing his way through curtains of mosquitoes, the Rocky Mountains, and the unforgiving rush of the Missouri River. Then, just when most people took them for dead, Lewis and his team resurfaced in victory. As a reward, Thomas Jefferson named Lewis governor of Louisiana.
But back in civilized society, the slow burn of politics and money had Lewis drinking and drugging. Brash and moody, he had no patience for politics. His critics said he was running the statehouse like a military camp. Edging toward bankruptcy, he was reduced to borrowing money from Clark to pay his bills.
Lewis' downward spiral bottomed out on a trip to Washington to clear up some ugly money matters. He stopped for the night at Grinder's Standa gritty country inn near the Mississippi-
Tennessee border on the Natchez Trace. After dinner, he asked Mrs. Grinder for some whisky, and she obliged. Then she sat, petrified, listening to him pacing and muttering angrily in the guest room before the shots rang out.... Continued
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