Surnames Categorized "Corps of Discovery members"

This is a list of surnames in which the categories include Corps of Discovery members.
usage
Charbonneau French
Derived from a diminutive form of French charbon "charcoal", a nickname for a person with black hair or a dark complexion.
Clark English
Means "cleric" or "scribe", from Old English clerec meaning "priest", ultimately from Latin clericus. A famous bearer was William Clark (1770-1838), an explorer of the west of North America.
Collins 2 English
Means "son of Colin 2".
Colter English
Variant of Colt using an agent suffix.
Deschamps French
Means "from the fields", from French champ "field".
Field English
Variant of Fields.
Floyd Welsh
Variant of Lloyd.
Gass German
Name for someone who lived on a street in a city, from German gasse.
Hall English, German, Danish, Norwegian, Swedish
Means simply "hall", given to one who either lived in or worked in a hall (the house of a medieval noble).
Herbert English, German, French
Derived from the male given name Herbert.
Howard 1 English
Derived from the given name Hughard or Hávarðr.
Lewis 2 Welsh
Anglicized form of Llywelyn.
Pryor English
Originally belonged to one who was a prior (a religious official), or one who worked for a prior.
Reed English
Variant of Read 1.
Robertson English
Means "son of Robert".
Shannon Irish
From Irish Ó Seanáin meaning "descendant of Seanán".
Werner German
From the given name Werner.
Willard English
From the given name Wilheard or Willihard.
Windsor English
From the name of a few English towns, one notably the site of Windsor Castle. Their names mean "riverbank with a windlass" in Old English, a windlass being a lifting apparatus. In 1917 the British royal family adopted this name (after Windsor Castle), replacing their previous name Saxe-Coburg and Gotha.