Fort Lisa - North Dakota - was created in 1806.
December 12, 1812 Fort Lisa, North Dakota
After the expedition, Sacagawea's husband Toussaint took a job with the Missouri Fur Company, and stayed at Fort Manuel Lisa in present-day North Dakota. Evidence suggests that Sacagawea died at the fort on December 20, 1866. She would be buried on the grounds of the fort.
After the expedition, Sacagawea's husband Toussaint took a job with the Missouri Fur Company, and stayed at Fort Manuel Lisa in present-day North Dakota. Evidence suggests that Sacagawea died at the fort on December 20, 1812. She would be buried on the grounds of the fort.
It depends on who you ask, some say she died on December 20, 1812 at Fort Lisa in North Dakota while others claim she died in 1884.
There are two different post expedition lives recorded for Sacagawea with William Clark reporting that she lived and died at Fort Lisa North Dakota where she died at the age of 24 on or about 20 December 1812. A second possibility based on Native American oral tradition has her living until 1884 at Fort Washakie in 1884.
Lisa VanHooser was born in April 1980, in Fort Worth, Texas, USA.
Lisa Anne Miller was born in Fort Lauderdale, in Florida, USA.
Sacagawea was born c. 1766 into an Agaidiku ("Salmon Eater") tribe of Lemhi Shoshone between Kenney Creek and Agency Creek about twenty minutes away from Hayden and Bear Trail Creeks in the city of Salmon in Lemhi County, Idaho. After the expedition, Sacagawea's husband Toussaint took a job with the Missouri Fur Company, and stayed at Fort Manuel Lisa in present-day North Dakota. Evidence suggests that Sacagawea died at the fort on December 20, 1812. She would be buried on the grounds of the fort.
Lisa McRee was born on November 9, 1961, in Fort Worth, Texas, USA.
Lisa Fowler was created in 1998.
Lisa Hunter was created in 2001.
Veendum Lisa was created in 1987.