Sacagawea joined them in November 1804. Her child was born in the camp February 11, 1805.
no, Lewis and Clark were not led by Sacajawea. sometimes she acted like a guide but she was just trying to help Lewis and Clark find the best paths. which is leading
right
Because she helped them survive, find new plants,transtalted for Lewis and Clark,and was a guide. I hope that helped alot.
More information on Pomp, Sacajawea's son, can be found online at Wikipedia and Lewis and Clark Trail, and in many history books covering the Lewis and Clark Expedition.
Sacagawea interpreted Indian languages for Lewis and clark.She was also partialy responsible for everything Lewis and Clark did.ANSWER BY:SEARRA,CHYNNA,AND ADDISON
She is on it because of how she helped Lewis and Clark find what they did we wanted to honor her by making statues of her and putting her on the coin.
She lived on the land that they were traveling. So she helped them find landmarks and tell them secrets of her land.
Sacagawea was important because she helped Lewis and Clark in their expedition to explore near the land of the Mississipi river and the land of the Lousianna purchase after the U.S claimed it. Even Lewis and Clark said that they wouldn't have survived without Sacagawea.
Sacajawea accompanied Lewis and Clark to try to find the Northwest passage in the West. Back then, the Americans in Lewis's and Clark's time thought that the West was a great deserted plain. Lewis and Clark were sent, along with some others, to explore. They found different plants, animals, and land marks. Some of these were different types of flowers, the Rocky Mountains, and buffalo. They also met more Native Americans. At the end Lewis and Clark did not find the Northwest passage, because it does not exist. But they discovered many other things.
Thomas Jefferson expected Lewis and Clark to find Mammoths.
When Lewis and Clark wintered at the present site of Bismarck, North Dakota, there they met Sacagawea and her husband Toussaint Charbonneau. She was 16 or 17 when she and Toussaint, who was a French trapper, joined the Lewis and Clark party on November 4, 1804. Sacagawea really didn't assertively join the expedition. It was her husband Toussaint Charbonneau who was invited and hired by Lewis and Clark as an interpreter, and Sacagawea would at first only serve as a companion.
Sacagawea's goals were to help Lewis and Clark find the Northwest Passage, although it did not really exist. She helped save their lives many times.