After the expedition, William Clark offered Toussaint and Sacajawea a place in St. Louis and a proper education for Jean-Baptiste (at a time where there was no opportunity for Native Americans to receive an education). Toussaint then 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. After her death, Toussaint signed over complete custody of his son Jean-Baptiste and his daughter Lisette over to William Clark.
No Sacajawea (Sacagawea) never lived in England
1786
yes
Figure it out!
the shoshone tribe
In the native lands.
Sacajawea lived in Lemnhi County, Idaho.
the Shoshone (sacagawea's tribe) were nomadic so they had tepee like dwellings
She moved to Fort Mandan because Clark invited her to live there.
Sacagawea died in year 1812 when she was 24 or 25.
Yes; Sacagawea is just different spelling version of Sacajawea.
Sacagawea discovers how to be a friend