Sacagawea
Well, actually, on the expedition, Meriwether Lewis and William Clark met up with the Hidatsas. On their journey to the Shoshone grounds, the Hidatsas gave Lewis and Clark Sacagawea and her husband, Toussaint Charbonneau. Sacagawea was a translator who spoke Shoshone, and her husband also helped out in the translations for trading, so actually, Sacagawea wasn't discovered by Lewis and Clark, she was more introduced. :)
No, Sacagawea did not marry Meriwether Lewis or William Clark. However, she did go on an expedition with Lewis and Clark along with her husband, Toussaint Charbonneau.
William Clark had delivered Jean-Babtiste and fondly nick-named him Pomp or Pompy
Sacagawea's first child was Jean-Baptiste, born during the Lewis and Clark expedition on February 11, 1805. William Clark would affectionally nickname him "Little Pomp" or "Pompy".
clark might have slep with her a few times but other then that there was no love coneion between them
Sacagawea wouldn't have been known for her famous expedition that she lead Lewis and Clark on
sacagawea explored for the Louis and Clark expedition.
Lewis, Clark, Sacagawea's Husband, Sacagawea, 45 members, and bunch of People in there.
Sacagawea called the baby, Meeko, which meant Little Brown Squirrel. Sacagawea's husband, Toussaint Charbonneau, called him Jean Baptist. Lewis and Clark called the baby Little Pomp, or Pompy, or Pomp.
Lewis and Clark called Sacajawea, Janey. Clark decided she looked like a girl he knew and called her Janey.
clark