Lewis and Clark Are Met With a Yawn After 200 Years Bicentennial Festivities Failed To Attract Big Crowds; An 'American Idol' Finale
By BROOKS BARNES July 19, 2006; Page A1
Paging Sacagawea: Lewis and Clark have lost their way again.
When President Bush issued a proclamation in 2002 creating a Lewis and Clark Bicentennial celebration, tourism officials from Virginia to Oregon pounced on it as a potential blockbuster. But as the three-year celebration enters its homestretch, participating communities are still waiting for the Lewis and Clark gravy train to leave the station.
"It's the great Lewis and Clark letdown," says Dave Hunt, a wholesaler of bicentennial knickknacks, including commemorative spoons and refrigerator magnets, in Lewiston, Idaho. In June, the town held a festival to mark the time in 1806 when the pair dropped in on a local Nez Perce Indian tribe. But the festivities -- a quilt and animal hides show, a craft fair and a re-enactment -- drew only a trickle of visitors.
Washington state expected as many as 10 million people to attend a number of events there, including boat tours of the expeditionary group's route along the Columbia River. Fewer than a million showed up. St. Charles, Mo., where the explorers began their epic journey, was similarly disappointed. The town anticipated as many as 500,000 visitors for its 10-day festival but ended up with about one-tenth that number.
And Great Falls, Mont., learned the hard way how many people were interested in its claim to Lewis and Clark fame. So few people turned out last summer to commemorate the pair's portage around the falls of the Missouri River that the city ended up $535,000 in debt. Ticket sales failed to cover the $1.6 million cost of staging events including river tours and a powwow. Says organizer George Horse Capture: "People acted like they would rather stay home and mow the lawn."
The explorers traveled more than 8,000 miles by land and river from Missouri to Oregon between 1804 and 1806, opening the Louisiana Purchase to Army exploration and settlement. An estimated $70 million to $100 million of city, state, federal, private and corporate money has been spent building infrastructure and staging events to honor that achievement. But tourism experts say the project was doomed from the start. Interest in the pioneer West has waned in the broader culture, they note, and Lewis and Clark aren't a big draw east of the Mississippi. Most important, they say, events such as craft fairs and hokey historical re-enactments don't make most vacationers hop a plane.
The bicentennial also suffers from a subtle but critical problem, says Stephen Dow Beckham, a professor at Lewis & Clark College in Portland, Ore., and expert on the expedition: America's view of what makes a hero has changed and, to many, Lewis and Clark no longer make the cut.
Indeed, in a culture that takes a more nuanced view of history, the explorers now come with a lot of political baggage that makes them a hard sell to tourists. People remember Meriwether Lewis and William Clark as expert adventurers. In reality, says Prof. Beckham, they were smart but flawed guys who could have gotten lost on the way to the outhouse, never mind the rugged wilderness. "Lewis had a drinking problem and ultimately committed suicide, while Clark worked to confine Indians to reservations," Prof. Beckham says. "These men helped make America a continental nation, but the commemoration is noting -- rightly -- the harm they did to Indian nations in the process."
Native American groups have protested the bicentennial. Many participating tribes are taking part only bitterly, staging lectures and screening films that conflict with the romantic tales of undaunted courage many tourists want to hear. (One film title: "Surviving Lewis and Clark: The Nimiipuu Story.") Official marketing campaigns haven't done a much better job selling events -- partly because there aren't many historic sites and attractions to promote. (One pitch: "Get bit by descendants of the same mosquitoes.")
The president of the nonprofit National Council of the Lewis & Clark Bicentennial, Robert Archibald, defends the whistle-stop extravaganza. "I'm very pleased and very proud of the way it has worked out," he says. Mr. Archibald concedes, however, that some communities expected more of an economic boost than they have gotten from the bicentennial. "When you set these overly optimistic targets and then fall short, it is suddenly a big failure," he says. "I think everybody should be happy with the turnout."
Mr. Archibald's organization played a role in building up those expectations, predicting that as many as 25 million people would attend events planned along the expedition's route. Also fueling expectations was the late historian Stephen Ambrose, author of a best-selling book about the expedition. He envisioned "crowds beyond any of our imaginings."
Mr. Archibald notes that some events, such as the kickoff ceremony at Monticello, Thomas Jefferson's home in Virginia, in 2003, were more successful than anticipated. Mother Nature wasn't especially kind to the explorers in 1806, Mr. Archibald adds, and she hasn't cut them many breaks in this century, either. Steady rain and lightning scuttled keelboat tours in Illinois and Missouri over the last two years. And the star attraction in Oregon, a 50-year-old replica of Fort Clatsop, where the expedition holed up for the winter of 1805, was destroyed by a fire in October last year.
Host communities -- many of them in poor pockets of rural states -- got so excited about potential tourism money that their expectations grew out of control, Mr. Archibald says.
Indeed, Fort Benton, Mont., population 1,500, was so concerned about managing big crowds that police conducted a disaster drill, pretending a truckload of ammonia crashed and spilled just as thousands of tourists descended on Main Street. Lewis and Clark's teenage guide, Sacagawea, fell ill near Fort Benton in June 1805. The town commemorated the event last summer with a Wild West shootout, duck races and a parade.
"A lot of these places didn't have a carefully drawn out marketing plan or assessment on the potential impact," Mr. Archibald says. "It was build it, and crowds will come."
That's not how some local planners see it. "People feel like they were sold a bill of goods," says Mr. Horse Capture. He says national officials should have realized a celebration stretching nearly four years was much too long. "By the time it got here, everyone was pretty L & C'd out," he says.
Mr. Archibald and planners for coming events say they are trying to send the bicentennial out with a bang by incorporating more entertainment. For instance, St. Louis, which will host the finale in September, is hoping to create some sizzle with fireworks displays, a giant portable aquarium, bus and riverboat tours and a concert by Nikko Smith, a finalist on the 2005 season of "American Idol."
Some organizers in Billings, Mont., are actually hoping fewer people show up than first anticipated at their signature event. A four-day festival starts Saturday at nearby Pompeys Pillar, a sandstone butte where Clark carved his name. Because the 200-year-old graffito is the only remaining evidence of the explorers' journey, some planners figured as many as 60,000 people could turn out.
That would be a problem. The cramped viewing platform, accessible by a winding set of wooden stairs, accommodates only about 30 people at a time. "We'll be happy just to have 30,000," says Dick Kodeski, the site's manager.
Die-hard Lewis and Clark fans certainly don't plan to stay home. Bill and Bernie Coventry are driving from Grand Island, Neb., for the celebration. Mrs. Coventry, a nurse, says she was so worried about finding a spot to park the couple's RV that she called in March for reservations at the Yellowstone River Campground in Billings. "I'm sure there are going to be swarms of people interested in this," she says.
As it turns out, Mrs. Coventry may have plenty of elbowroom. The 125-space RV park says business is just fine, but that it has fielded just three other reservations from people who mentioned the Lewis and Clark event.
Write to Brooks Barnes at brooks.barnes@wsj.com1
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