Sacagawea
Stephanie Krakowski
US History 1 Honors
Mrs. Farris
October 22, 2014 Sacagawea was one of the most important people to make the expedition of Lewis and Clark a success. She is the most well-known person for the expedition of Lewis and Clark. Despite Sacagawea facing difficult problems before joining the journey, she immediately proved to play a vital part to help the members of the Corps of Discovery along the journey. Sacagawea played a significant role in the success of the expedition of Lewis and Clark. Sacagawea was known to speak the language of the Shoshones which was her home village or tribe as well as being familiar with their culture. Sacagawea even gave birth to a child along the
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First, Sacagawea had many valuable skills such as an Indian language translator, navigator, and an expert on which foods are safe to gather along the journey. "The captains brought with them 43 men, 8 canoes, food, medicine, and gifts for the Indians." The environment was very diverse with mostly men and few women on the expedition. Sacagawea was able to change the atmosphere of the journey. She created a positive feeling on the expedition. The group was able to avoid the hostile Indians due to the peaceful symbol that Sacagawea represented. ""William Clark explained that “the Wife of Shabono [Charbonneau]…reconciles all the Indians, as to our friendly intentions. A woman with a party of men is a token of peace.”" Sacagawea and her child represented peace to other tribes in the different regions that they came across during the journey. ""As Clark explained in his journals, Charbonneau was hired “as an interpreter through his wife.” If and when the expedition met the Shoshones, Sacagawea would talk with them, then translate to Hidatsa for Charbonneau, who would translate to French. The Corps’ Francois Labiche spoke French and English, and would make the final translation so that the two English-speaking captains would understand."" Not only could she understand different languages but she could also negotiate with different tribes. The members along the expedition of Lewis and Clark were …show more content…
Local Indians were kind enough and told the Corps about a whale being on the beach. There was a scarce amount of food during the winter and it was hard to obtain food during the season. When they had heard that there was a whale on the beach, Clark took this as an opportunity to get food. Clark got a group of men to accompany him to find the whale on the beach and possibly feed the Corps with oil and blubber. Sacagawea had yet to see the whole Pacific Ocean and wanted to take the opportunity to see the ocean finally on the beach. When Sacagawea asked Clark to join him on the beach he could not refuse. ""As Captain Lewis wrote on January 6, 1806, “[T]he Indian woman was very impo[r]tunate to be permited to go, and was therefore indulged; she observed that she had traveled a long way with us to see the great waters, and that now that monstrous fish was also to be seen, she thought it very hard she could not be permitted to see either.”" After they had discovered the whale and had eaten they decided to return back from the journey. On their journey back they had passed through Sacagawea's homeland, where she proved to be a valuable guide. "She remembered Shoshone trails from her childhood, and Clark praised her as his “pilot.” The most important trail she recalled, which Clark described as “a large road passing through a gap in the mountain,” led to the Yellowstone River.
In Captain Lewis and Clark’s famous expedition, they successfully made it across the Rocky Mountains to the Pacific Ocean, opening the previously occupied western region for trade routes. Their unforgettable adventure led to the first reports of the American West. Over the course of the exhibition Lewis and Clark interacted with almost 50 different tribes. The trail of tears, fewer than 10 tribes were interacted with and they were just forced to move.
Sacagawea is a Shoshone Indian who helped navigate during the Lewis and Clark expedition. Her name means “Bird Woman’’ in Shoshone and “Boat Launcher’’ in Hidatsa. Sacagawea was born in 1788 Lemhi County, Idaho. Sacagawea is the daughter of the Shoshone chief. She not only helped navigate around the wilderness, but she was a good spokesperson between the Native Americans and explorers.
“Sacagawea and her husband Charbonneau lived with the Hidatsa and Mandan Indians in the Missouri River area Where North Dakota is now. Lewis and Clark met Charbonneau and quickly hired him to serve as interpreter on their expedition. Even though she was pregnant with her first child, Sacagawea was chosen to come them on their mission. Even with her traveling with Jean Baptiste during the expedition Sacagawea proved to be helpful. She was skilled at finding edible plants.
Then when she was 12 years old she was kidnapped by a group of Hidatsa Indians. The group of Hidatsa indians were her tribes enemy. Then she was traded or gambled off by a French Candadian fur trapper named Toussaint Charlameaic . After that Sacagewea then became pregnant with her first child Jean Bapitiste and his nickname was Little Pomp at age 16 . Then in 1804 she was invited to the Lewis and Clark expedition to be the navigator and interpreter.
John Paul Secrest Professor Tinsley Essay Review December 7, 2016 In this essay, the historical work that will be analyzed and reviewed is the story of Sacajawea by Harold P. Howard. This book recounts the story of Sacajawea and her journey with Lewis and Clark. Howard mainly tells the story of the Lewis and Clark expedition while focusing in on a few points about Sacajawea. The story also talks about the history of her husband Toussaint Charbonneau and son John Baptiste.
However, as the voyage ended Lewis said that even after reaching the Northwest Pacific, the water route was nowhere to be seen, which left the main goal unaccomplished. Instead, as the explorers explored the Louisiana Purchase territory, they developed a friendlier relationship with the Native Americans who inhabited most of the land. One of the crew members stated that Captain Lewis purchased different kinds of gifts for the Native Americans to show friendship and allegiance. While another member said that a Native American woman named Sacagawea's presence as a guide and interpreter for the Corps of Discovery, improved their relationship with the Natives. She got along with the local tribes which helped the crew buy goods and supplies for their expedition.
As Lewis and Clark journeyed through the land they had met Shoshone woman
The year after his wife’s death in 1820, Clark married Harriet Kennerly Radford, a widow with three children, and fathered two more sons. A generous man, Clark served as legal guardian for Sacagawea’s children, cared for numerous relatives, and offered assistance to religious groups, missionaries, explorers, and travelers. On the other hand, Clark treated his slave York harshly upon their return from the expedition, although he claimed to have eventually freed him. When Lewis and Clark had problems with illnesses or anything like that the blackfoot indians would send their women to their camp to help them.
From the start of their, Lewis and Clark embraced their old abilities and were regularly documenting the new features that Louisiana held. While Lewis was creating highly detailed maps of the land, Clark spent his time on land, documenting previously undiscovered animals (pictured below), plants, and geographic features. The expedition started smoothly, and by the end of July, the group had traveled more than 600 miles on the river. However, to the group’s unease, not one Indian had been seen or encountered. That was until the beginning of August, when the Corps of Discovery was finally given the opportunity to make a good first impression on the Native Americans.
In the year 1807, Thomas Jefferson sent Meriwether Lewis and William Clark on an expedition with a group of men. Specifically, the goal was to discover new waterways and routes near the Pacific ocean and to uncover new finds in the West. Along the way, the group of men was later joined by a woman named Sacagawea and her family. In general, the group ended up finding new Indian tribes, the Rockies, and over 300 new types of species. In the “ The Lewis and Clark Journey Begins”, from National Geographic, the article summarizes the dangerous and rough expedition Lewis and Clark took with a group of men in order to find new discoveries.
According to the author, Sacajawea was a young Shoshone Native American woman. She played a very important role guiding Lewis and Clark the expedition through the northwest territory of the United States of America in 1805-1806. She was fearless and soon died of typhus and only lived to the age of 25. I hope you enjoy my paper. Before the expedition Sacajawea was born in 1789, in present-day Idaho.
George Rogers Clark once said: “If a country were not worth protecting, it was not worth claiming.” Nearly everyone knows how the United States gained recognition as an independent nation after the Revolutionary War. George Washington and his men fought to free the States in the East; however, few people know the story of how the country swelled in size. During the Revolutionary War, the actions of George Rogers Clark’s expedition, west of the Appalachian mountains, would later prove necessary for peace and expansion of the country’s frontiers. The future conqueror of the West grew up in Virginia, one of ten children of John Clark and Ann Rogers.
The Lewis and Clark expedition which took place between 1804 and 1806 is one of the most iconic events in American history. It was a journey of discovery, exploration, and scientific inquiry, and it helped to establish the United States claim to the Pacific Northwest. Led by Meriwether Lewis and William Clark, the expedition was a remarkable achievement, and its impact on American society and culture. The expedition began in the spring of 1804 when Lewis and Clark along with a group of about forty men set out from St. Louis, Missouri on a mission to explore the western territories of the United States.
Members chosen for the expedition were sought after for skills that included hunting, blacksmithing, and gunsmithing, making United States Army soldiers a good option for crew who traveled by land, water and horseback, for nearly 8,000 miles over mountains, through plains and by rivers (The Lewis and Clark Expedition, 2016). The success of the Lewis and Clark expedition was important to science, as they made important observations about the land of North America that lead to creation of maps with Captain Clark having the duty of mapping the landscape because of his experience: the result of maps made by Clark became one of the most important achievements of the western exploration. (The Lewis and Clark Expedition, 2016). The scientific information collected on geography, meteorology, cultures, and animal life and plant life were greatly important to the nation (Corps of Discover, 2016). The trip also was partially useful in creating peaceful relations with the American Indians in territories of the Northwest, although not all tribes were accepting of the gestures, giving gifts was important to building peaceful relationships with the American Indians (The Corp of Discovery, 2016).
Who is Sacagawea, Sacagawea is a born in Lemhi County, Idaho and helped Lewis and Clark with the Expedition the Pacific Coast. What did Sacagawea do? Sacagawea was a Shoshone interpreter for Lewis and Clark. When did she join the Expedition? Sacagawea joined the expedition when she was around the age of 12. Where did Sacagawea grow up? Sacagawea grew up around the Rocky Mountains and her father was the chief of the Shoshone tribe. Why Sacagawea is important?