Last updated: December 27, 2019
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Lewis and Clark's Fourth of July 1804 in Kansas

Photo: Kansas Travel.org
You’ll find a memorial marker and covered bridge over 4th of July 1804 Creek. It’s near the Atchison County Historical Museum and Atchison Rail Museum. A larger memorial is the Lewis and Clark Pavilion in Riverfront Park, on the banks of the Missouri, built and dedicated in 2004 for the bicentennial celebration. Here you can walk, run or bike along a five-mile path which leads you north of the city to the Independence Creek Historical Site. In 1804, this site was along the Missouri, but due to channel changes, it’s now several miles from the river. At the Independence Creek camp site, the men celebrated the country’s independence by firing the keelboat’s swivel gun.
At the Atchison County Historical Society Museum you’ll find a commemorative statue of Lewis, Clark, Sacagawea, York and Seaman. The city is also the birthplace of aviator, Amelia Earhart.