they slept in a cottage for most of the timing
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
of corse. they were practically the only ones left.
to dance in the whitehouse while having a bucket on his head.
When their expedition ran out of food while traveling through the Bitterroot Mountains which are near the Rockies.
She got famous by having a child on her back while being on a expedition with Lewis and Clark. To honor her we put her on the dollar coin.
Lewis&Clark met while in the army.
Prior to the expedition, Clark was in fact Lewis' superior officer and was very experienced in handling boats. While Lewis spent his time in St. Louis gathering information, Clark did most of the work of turning the disparate crew into an integrated corps. Clark served mainly as the expedition "doctor" and as co-captain in updating the journals. He often traded medical care for food and eventually established a reputation among the natives for his skills. Finding a man with a tumor on his thigh who couldn't walk, Clark cleansed and dressed the wound and left him some soap to wash the sore. He soon got better and as Clark says "this man assigned the restoration of his leg to me."
Meriwether Lewis was born in 1774, and died in 1809, three years after he famously crossed the northwestern US with William Clark. While acting as territorial governor of Upper Louisiana, he died of gunshot wounds while traveling south of Natchez, Misissippi. While ruled a suicide, his death is still widely suspected to be a homicide.
Clark did not like water while Lewis loved boats!
yes Lewis and clark ate their dog while enduring the harsh winter in the rockies
Yes. After he bought the Louisiana Territory, he sent Lewis and Clark to explore it, and see if there is a river that travels across the states. They met a trader, and Sacagawea on the way, who also helped. There were also many tribes that helped while they went out on their trek...
Lewis would suffer from a bad case of the flu one winter and Clark suffered from a "rheumatism of the neck" which caused him pain for several days. For Clark, Lewis applied a "hot stone wrapped in flannel" to help ease his pain. On August 11, 1806, near the end of the expedition, Lewis was shot in the left thigh by Pierre Cruzatte, a near-blind man under his command, while both were hunting for elk. At first, Pierre blamed Blackfoot natives for the injury, but after the Corps found no sign of Blackfoot, he admitted the accident. Clark bandaged and treated Lewis' wound,.