Page:Historic highways of America (Volume 8).djvu/29

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CLARK'S ROUTES
25

passed near Carbondale, Williamson County, and crossed the Big Muddy River at Murphysboro.[1] It was known as the "western trail." Not touching the prairie land, it is plain that the route could be used only in the driest of midsummer weather.

The evidence that Clark's guides took the middle trail is overwhelming; the western trail was too wet and did not touch any prairie—this utterly excludes that route from the list of possibilities. According to Clark's Memoir, on the third day out the party reached a prairie where the chief guide became confused; Clark's command to him was to discover and take them into the hunter's road that led from the east into Kaskaskia. There can be no doubt that this "hunter's road" which came from the east was the Kaskaskia–Shawneetown trace, which the Old Massac Road joined in Pope County, or that the middle trail was the one which the party had been following; the junction of the middle trail on the Brooks Place, above mentioned, is in Phelps Prairie and about a three days' march from Fort Massac. The junction of

  1. Id., fol. 27.