In this paper you will learn about Sacagawea and what happen in the Lewis and Clark expedition.
Sacagawea was born in the 1788 and died in December 20 1812. Sacagawea was a Lemhi Shoshone woman who accomplished the Lewis and Clark expedition as a interpreter. She traveled from North Dakota to Pacific Ocean.
Sacagawea was pregnant with her first child when they hit corps discovery. They arrived near the Hidatsa village to spend the winter 1804-1805. Charbonneau was hired to interpret than they discovered that Charbonneau wife Sacagawea spikes Shoshone. They moved into the fort a week later. Sacagawea then had her baby on Feb, 11, 1805. In April the expedition left fort Mandan and they headed up to the Missouri river. On May 14, 1805 Sacagawea fallen out of a boat with all the journals and records of Lewis and Clark.
On August of 1805 the corps had located a Shoshone tribe. They used Sacagawea to interpret and discover the tribe. When the corps reached the Pacific Ocean all members of the expedition voted on November 24 on the location building of their winter fort. While Sacagawea has been depicted as a guide for the expedition, she is recorded as providing direction in only a few instances. Her work as an interpreter certainly helped the party to negotiate with the Shoshone. However, her greatest value to the mission may have been simply her presence during the arduous journey, which showed their peaceful intent.
After the expedition Sacagawea and her husband spent 3 years among the Hidatsa before accepting Clark’s invitation to settle in St.Louis in 1809. Sacagawea gave birth to a little girl sometime in 1810. Then Sacagawea died to an unknown sickness.
Jean baptiste Charbonneau was born on Feb. 11 when Sacagawea was on the expedition of Lewis and Clark. Jean traveled from North Dakota to the Pacific Ocean and back. In April of 1807 about 2 years after the expedition the Charbonneau moved to st. Louis