Interesting way to ask the question. It can be answered several ways.
In the broader sense LEWIS and Clark did complete their mission, making it all the way from the Misissippi River to the Pacific and back again with notebooks filled with information about the land and peoples, flora and fauna they experienced along the way.
In the narrowest technical sense, they could not have completed their mission, for there is no navigable water passage all the way from the Mississippi to the Pacific.
But in the strictest intellectual sense of the question, they did not complete their mission because these copious and meticulous notes they made in their journals were not published, at least not in their lifetimes and not as they probably had intended. Hence, it took decades before their scientific achievement was recognized or adequately documented.
Meriwether Lewis, the brilliant planner of the expedition, to whom the scientific writing was largely entrusted, was probably manic-depressive. He died as a victim of either suicide or murder as he made his way back to DC to make his official report to the President. However, he was already entangled in the morass of details that needed to be written up and published, and his leadership had not found a satisfying object after the expedition. Probably his adrenalin kept him on a psychological high throughout most of the expedition and suffered a letdown when it was over.
But in a symbolic sense and in the broadest, fairest intellectual sense, not only did they complete their missions as both explorers and naturalists, but they also redefined the mission to meet the obstacles they met and embodied the very spirit of exploration. They were leaders, they were managers, they were thinkers, they were writers (especially Lewis), and they were almost ideally suited as partners. They were courageous and compassionate. They proceeded with care, but they took the risks necessary to achieve their goal. They were, in fact, American heroes.
See Stephen Ambrose's dramatic account in his book Undaunted Courage -- and some of the many materials produced all along the trail for the bicentennial of the event.
2006-11-11 06:41:31
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answer #1
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answered by bfrank 5
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What? This is the first I heard that. They did complete their mission. They made it all the way to the Pacific Coast.
2006-11-07 23:16:02
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answer #2
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answered by just browsin 6
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I believe it was because they were unable to find a water passage from the Mississippi to the pacific ocean. That was the main objective.
2006-11-08 01:33:30
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answer #3
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answered by haiku_katie 4
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They did complete their jorney and documented (and drew) lots of new plants and animals never before seen for the newly established 13 colonies.
2006-11-07 23:23:50
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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they did complete there mission..........read this........its simple to understand.
http://www.destinationcinema.com/our_films/theater_managers/documents/lewis_script.pdf
2006-11-07 23:24:15
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answer #5
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answered by tab2508 2
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