Sacagawea helped Lewis and Clark
Sacajawea
Meriwether Lewis and William Clark led the expedition to explore the Louisiana Territory. They were assisted by a team of explorers, soldiers, and interpreters, including famous figures like Sacagawea, a Shoshone woman who served as a guide and interpreter.
Sacagewea was a Shoshone woman and was kidnapped when she was little and was sold to her husband Toussaint Carbonneau. Sacagawea was a guide and interpreter on the expedition. When they came across the shoshone, sacagawea convinced them to supply them with horses and food.
Sacagawea (of the Shoshone tribe) carrying her infant son, Jean Baptiste Charbonneau, is depicted on the observse of the golden dollar coin. This coin was first minted in 2000. She participated in the 1804 Lewis and Clark expedition.
She helped during the Lewis and Clark Expedition as a guide and interpreter.
Sacajawea
Sacajawea
Sacagawea helped Lewis and Clark
Shoshone
Sacagawea was the Shoshone Indian woman who served as a single guide and interpreter on the Lewis and Clark expedition. She played a crucial role in helping the explorers navigate the unfamiliar terrain and establish peaceful relations with Native American tribes along the way.
That would be "Who was the Shoshone guide on the Lewis and Clark expedition?" and the answer is the young Shoshone girl with a Hidatsa name: Tsakakawia (Bird Woman). This name was incorrectly spelled Sacagawea by Lewis and Clark and later spelled even less accurately by a loony newspaper man as Sacajawea.
That would be "Who was the Shoshone guide on the Lewis and Clark expedition?" and the answer is the young Shoshone girl with a Hidatsa name: Tsakakawia (Bird Woman). This name was incorrectly spelled Sacagawea by Lewis and Clark and later spelled even less accurately by a loony newspaper man as Sacajawea.
The name of the famous Shoshone guide to Lewis and Clark is written as either Sacagawea or Sacajawea.
Sacagawea, a Lemhi Shoshone woman, served as a guide and interpreter for the Lewis and Clark Expedition. She played a crucial role in helping the expedition navigate through unfamiliar territories and establishing peaceful relations with Native American tribes they encountered.
Shoshone
because she served as both an interpreter and guide.
Her name was SACAGAWEA a Shoshone women who was the guide for the Lewis and Clark expedition.