She ate a waffle.
She got married to Toussaint Charbonneau.
Before. She had his baby boy. Clark named him Pompeii.
She got married and had "pompy".
His most famous wife was Sacajawea, who along with her husband, served as guide on the "Lewis and Clark expedition". She, along with another young Indian girl, had been purchased by Charbonneau a few years before. Sacajawea gave birth to their son, Jean Baptiste, shortly before the start of the expedition. She died about seven years later, at the age of twenty five. He had an unknown number of wives throughout his life.
before
no not until after
After
this is super cool in have never done this before:)
The Lewis and Clark expedition is in 1805 AD (8 o'clock on the time device). They need the peace medal from Leonardo DaVinci (1516 AD, 4 o'clock). Climb the tree and jump before the squirrel does, and you can get the Stone Bowl for the Great Wall of China.
Sacajawea, the Shoshone woman known for her role as a guide and interpreter during the Lewis and Clark Expedition in the early 1800s, did not have favorite movies, as she lived long before the invention of film. However, her legacy has been depicted in various films and documentaries that highlight her contributions to American history. Modern interpretations may focus on her bravery and resilience, but any "favorite movies" would be a contemporary projection rather than her actual preferences.
On February 11, 1805, Jean-Baptiste's birth was recorded by Lewis at the Awatixa village on the south side of the Knife River, 50 days before the expedition left the Mandans. Fort Mandan was built by the members of the expedition as their own shelter within the village, however it is unclear whether Sacagawea gave birth to her son within the walls of the fort, or nearby at what Lewis and Clark called the interpreter's hut.
Sacagawea had a son named Jean-Baptiste Charbonneau ("Little Pomp" or "Pompy") who was born on February 11, 1805 during the Lewis and Clark expedition. After the expedition, Clark would later raise and educate young Jean at a time where there was little opportunity for schooling for Native Americans. Her daughter Lizette was born in late 1810 or in 1811, before Sacajawea's reported death in 1812.