sacagawea

Sacagawea was a Shoshone Indian who traveled with the Lewis and Clark expedition from 1804-1806. [1]

Amid all the shouting and gunshots and waves, however, there was one member of the expedition who proved calm and resourceful: Charbonneau’s teenage wife, Sacagawea, the only woman in the party. [2]

In 1800, when she was about 12 years old, Sacagawea was kidnapped by a war party of Hidatsa Indians — enemies of her people, the Shoshones. [3]

These questions are central to understanding Sacagawea, in her own right, in the context of the nineteenth century, and in today’s setting. [4]

A near-legendary figure in the history of the American West for her indispensible role on the Lewis and Clark Expedition, Sacagawea has become an enigma for historians seeking to trace her later life. [5]

1788 ‘ December 20, 1812; see below for other theories about her death) was a Shoshone woman who accompanied the Lewis and Clark Expedition, led by Meriwether Lewis and William Clark, in their exploration of the Western United States. [6]

A Wind River Shoshone woman who claimed to be Sacagawea lived until 1884, but most scholars believe that the Sacagawea who accompanied Lewis and Clark died in 1812. [1]

May 14, 1805, started off auspiciously for the Lewis and Clark expedition, but by evening a gusty wind was blowing along the Missouri River, threatening disaster. [2]

Captain Clark wrote that the ‘great object was to make every letter sound’ in recording Indian words in their journals. [3]

Sacagawea was an American Indian woman, the only one on Lewis and Clark’s 1804 expedition. [4]

The most illustrious prisoner to become a member of the tribe was Bird Woman, the Shoshoni guide for Lewis and Clark in 1805-1806. [7]

As a teenager, she served the Expedition as interpreter, diplomat, and peace symbol. [8]

The answers can be found in a detailed reading of Sacagawea’s role in the 8 volumes of daily journals written by Lewis and Clark, during the Corps of Discovery’s expedition to the Pacific Ocean, and the few remaining historical documents confirming Sacagawea’s true fate. [9]

When Lewis and Clark engaged Charbonneau as an interpreter for their expedition in 1804, it was with the understanding that Sacagawea would also accompany them. [5]

Sacagawea was a valuable member of the Lewis and Clark Expedition. [8]

Sources:
[1] Sacagawea: Biography from Answers.com
[2] Sacagawea @ National Geographic Magazine
[3] Lewis and Clark . Inside the Corps . The Corps . Sacagawea | PBS
[4] Sacagawea
[5] Sacagawea
[6] Sacagawea - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
[7] Corps of Discovery - The Others - Sacagawea
[8] IMA Hero: Sacagawea HH
[9] Sacagawea: From captive to Indian interpreter to a true American legend

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