Private John Newman (ca. 1785? - 1838) was a member of the Lewis and Clark Expedition. He was born in Pennsylvania and was a member of Captain Daniel Bissell's company of the First Infantry Regiment. During the expedition in October 1804, John Newman ran into disciplinary problems and was confined for "having uttered repeated expressions of a highly criminal and mutinous nature." No records remain of the exact nature of his offense. He received a court-martial, and was sentenced to seventy-five lashes. In addition, John Newman was removed from the expedition; however, since they were en route through the wilderness, he continued to travel with them to Fort Mandan. He performed hard labor and tried to redeem himself in the eyes of the two captains, but was sent back east with the return party in April of 1805.
After the expedition, John Newman became a hunter and trapper in the Dakotas, and was killed by the Yankton Sioux in the summer of 1838.
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