In this post I will describe my research about David Thompson's explorations of the Pacific Northwest. I will focus on peer-reviewed scholarly sources - journal articles and books using the search features on the EWU libraries site.
Nisbet, Jack. Sources of the River. Seattle: Sasquatch Books, 1994.
I read this book as an undergrad and loved every page. I especially remember the meeting between Thompson and the Crow Indian Saukamapee. Saukamapee remembered the coming of the horse and the first brutal wave of smallpox. The descriptions of Thompson's explorations are picturesque and reveal the reality of his adventures with vividness and detail. (3 copies available at EWU libraries)
Not knowing what else Nisbet has written, I was pleased to find a 2005 work published by (ah hem) Washington State University (my alma mater) titled The Mapmaker's Eye: David Thompson on the Columbia Plateau. Sounds like it might fit the course, no?
A quick EWU Library Title search of "David Thompson" yielded an additional three biographies, all dated. These are in Special Collections.
Now let's check America: History and Life, a wonderful scholarly resource for American history. I went to the library homepage, clicked on the "Find Articles" link then "Databases A-Z" and then "America: History and Life." After doing an advanced search for "David Thompson" in quotes I got five hits the first was a review for
Jenish, Eric. Epic Wanderer: David Thompson and the Mapping of the Canadian West. Toronto: Anchor/Random House, 2004.
So that's a useful lead.
There are four more scholarly articles available in full text. When I removed the "Links to Full Text" search option I got 37 hits, many of them book reviews. I went back and limited them to just articles (under "Document Type," in advanced search) and got 26 hits.
Taking five minutes to go through the articles, I found that the Alberta Historical Review and Alberta History have taken a keen interest in Thompson and so has the journal Beaver, which I have never heard of, but which probably is a journal specializing in the fur trade. One of the articles from Beaver, "The Great Map" is available in Full Text. I checked to see if I could find Beaver in Full text, so I clicked on the "Check for Full Text" link below one of the hits and then clicked on "Electronic Journals A-Z" And there it was, in full text 1990-present. For the articles before 1990 I'll need to request a copy from Interlibrary Loan (ILL). But wait, I forgot to check EWU's Library Journals collection and, sure enough, there it is in hard copy - all the way back to 1923.
I feel like I have plenty of scholarly sources available to delve deeply into a topic which I will call "Explorations of the Fur Trappers." I skimmed the article "The Great Map" and it seems to have a lot of interesting background information about Thompson's explorations, including several dates for a timeline.