- Sacagawea - Wikipedia
Sacajawea Memorial Area, at Lemhi Pass, a National Historic Landmark managed by the National Forest Service and located on the boundary of Montana and Idaho, where visitors can hike the Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail
- Sacagawea | Biography, Husband, Baby, Death, Facts | Britannica
Sacagawea (Sacajawea), Shoshone Indian woman who, as interpreter, traveled thousands of miles with the Lewis and Clark Expedition (1804–06), from the Mandan-Hidatsa villages in the Dakotas to the Pacific Northwest
- Sacagawea: Facts, Tribe Death - HISTORY
Possibly the most memorialized woman in the United States, with dozens of statues and monuments, Sacagawea lived a short but legendarily eventful life in the American West
- Sacagawea | National Womens History Museum
Though spelled numerous ways in the journals of expedition members, Sacagawea is generally believed to be a Hidatsa name (Sacaga means “bird” and wea means “woman”) In that case, the third syllable starts with a hard g, as there is no soft g in the Hidatsa language
- Sacagawea’s Story - U. S. National Park Service
Sacagawea is one of the most recognizable names in American history But who was she? Sacagawea spoke both Shoshone and Hidatsa We know that she grew up with Shoshone people near what is now the Montana Idaho border, and that, at the age of twelve, she was captured by Hidatsa people
- Who was Sacagawea? Here’s the real story of her critical role . . .
Explorer Sacagawea stares into the distance while Jean Baptiste Charbonneau sleeps soundly on her back She was vital to the Lewis and Clark Expedition after the Louisiana Purchase Of all the
- Sacagaweas Story - Discover Lewis Clark
In the fall of 1804, Sacagawea was around seventeen years old, the pregnant second wife of French Canadian trader Toussaint Charbonneau, and living in Metaharta, the middle Hidatsa village on the Knife River of western North Dakota
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