Sacajawea (or Sacagawea) was born c. 1788. Toussaint Charbonneau, a French Canadian trapper, acquired her from a Hidatsa warrior and took her as his wife when she was 13. After the expedition, 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 in 1812. Some Native American oral traditions relate that rather than dying in 1812, Sacagawea left her husband Toussaint Charbonneau, crossed the Great Plains and married into a Comanche tribe, then returned to the Shoshone in Wyoming where she died in 1884.
In either case, they would've been married for 11 years.
She married Toussaint Charbonneau in 1804.
Jean Baptiste Charbonneau was 61.
Sacagawea
Charbonneau
Charbonneau did.
Sacagawea (or Sacajawea) was married to Toussaint Charbonneau, a French Canadian explorer and fur trader. Sacagawea is well-known for serving as an interpreter and guide for Lewis and Clark during their expedition.
shoshone.
Sacagawea
Sacajawea (or Sacagawea) was born c. 1788. Toussaint Charbonneau, a French Canadian trapper, acquired her from a Hidatsa warrior and took her as his wife when she was 13.
The names of Sacagawea's children was Jean Baptiste Charbonneau and Lizette Charbonneau. Her husbands name was Toussaint Charbonneau. Sacagawea is best known for accompanying Lewis and Clark on their expedition.
1805
Sacagawea