When we think of the Lewis and Clark expedition of 1804, we picture the ultimate American story: a desperate search for the Northwest Passage, mapping uncharted wilderness, and the expansion of a young nation.
But when President Thomas Jefferson handed Meriwether Lewis his final instructions, he included a directive that sounds like it belongs in a fantasy novel. Jefferson, a man of the Enlightenment, instructed his explorers to look for a lost tribe of Native Americans who spoke Welsh. He even armed them with a list of Welsh vocabulary words to cross-reference with the tribes they encountered.
To understand why a Founding Father was hunting for Welshmen in the American interior, we have to rewind the clock over six hundred years, leave the sun-dappled American frontier, and step into the cold, rain-slicked stone castles of 12th-century North Wales.
The Bloody Summer of 1170
Following the death of Owain Gwynedd, King of Gwynedd, the realm fractured. His sons immediately plunged the kingdom into a brutal, fratricidal civil war for the crown. According to legend, one of those sons, Prince Madoc, was utterly disgusted by the slaughter of his own family.
Rather than fight his brothers, Madoc chose exile
built a small fleet of ships and sailed west, directly into the terrifying and unmapped Atlantic Ocean. Months later, he returned to Wales with an impossible story. He claimed to have found a massive, fertile land across the western sea. He gathered ten more ships—filling them with men, women, and children seeking a peaceful life away from the bloodshed of Gwynedd—and sailed west a second time.
Madoc and his fleet were never seen in Wales again.
The Mystery of the Mandan
For centuries, the story of Madoc was treated as a campfire myth. But by the 18th century, strange rumors began trickling back to the East Coast from French trappers and early frontiersmen. They spoke of a tribe along the Missouri River called the Mandan.
The Mandan didn't fit the European assumptions of nomadic Plains tribes. They lived in permanent, heavily fortified towns made of earth and timber, laid out with deliberate civic planning featuring distinct streets and a central public plaza. Proponents of the Welsh theory argued this level of fixed, defensive civic engineering was a lingering echo of medieval European castle-building.
But the visual centerpiece of the myth was how they navigated the treacherous Missouri River.
Frontiersmen noted the Mandan used "bull boats"—made by stretching a raw buffalo hide over a bowl-shaped frame of woven willow branches. Crucially, they were rowed exactly like a Welsh coracle, with a single paddle used in a figure-eight motion at the front of the boat. To a Welsh immigrant trapping in the Dakotas, seeing a Native American rowing a perfect replica of a River Towy coracle would have been a staggering sight.
Rumors spread rapidly through London and Washington. Pamphlets claimed the Mandan word for bread sounded like bara, water like dwr, a valley like cwm, and a bluebird like glas. Later, when the famous 19th-century painter George Catlin lived among them, he was astonished to note that many Mandan had hazel or blue eyes, and that a significant portion of the tribe inherited a trait of naturally silvery-grey hair.
The Farmhand Who Mapped the West
This brings us to the most improbable footnote in American history. In 1792, a 22-year-old Welsh farmhand named John Evans left the small village of Waunfawr in Snowdonia and sailed to America with just $1.75 to his name. Funded by radical Welsh intellectuals, his sole mission was to find the Welsh Indians.
He literally walked from the East Coast to St. Louis. After being briefly imprisoned as a British spy, he convinced the Spanish colonial government to fund his expedition up the Missouri River. Between 1795 and 1797, Evans endured a grueling 1,800-mile journey, surviving hostile encounters and brutal winters, finally reaching the Mandan villages in North Dakota.
It was a crushing disappointment.
Evans spent six months living among the Mandan and realized almost immediately they were entirely Native American. In 1797, a broken-hearted Evans wrote back to London: "In respect of the Welsh Indians, I have to inform you that there is no such people."
He died of malaria in New Orleans shortly after, at just 29 years old. However, his journey was not a failure.
During his expedition, Evans produced a meticulously detailed map of roughly 700 miles of the Missouri River. That cartographic masterpiece made its way onto the desk of Thomas Jefferson. When Lewis and Clark set off in 1804, Jefferson gave them Evans's map. They relied on it so heavily they didn't even bother making their own primary maps of the lower Missouri River.
The Welsh farmhand who went looking for a myth had ultimately drawn the literal roadmap for America's greatest expedition.
The Movie We Aren't Getting (Yet)
Hollywood is constantly searching for the next great historical epic, yet studios remain remarkably risk-averse, often shying away from purely European medieval histories.
But the story of Madoc isn't just Welsh history—it is the ultimate American frontier mystery. Imagine a cinematic epic told across two timelines. In one, a gritty, panoramic survival thriller as Lewis and Clark navigate the dangers of the 1804 frontier, guided by a Welshman's map and a secret mandate from the President. In the other, Madoc’s 1170 AD fleet battles Atlantic storms and attempts to build a civilization from scratch in a primeval wilderness.
It is Master and Commander meets The Revenant. It bridges the folklore of Wales with the birth of the United States. The story is sitting right there in the historical record, waiting for a filmmaker bold enough to set sail.
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