Poems about sacagawea biography
Sacagawea was born in
Sacagawea's Capture* As I strolled the Knife River trail a dust cloud swirled and fell and earth lodges appeared by the score extending from the path to the river banks. Hidatsa women sang at their chores, husking corn - beading moccasins - scraping a buffalo hide.Born the daughter of a Sacagawea is an American Indian woman who was married to a fur trader who bought her as one of two wives. She accompanied him on the Lewis and Clark Expedition and is said to have saved precious books with her baby on her back, when their boat tipped over in a squall.
This guided Sacagawea Bio They were Meriwether Lewis and William Clark, Her name was Sacagawea. On an expedition they did embark Finding the passage to the sea. Down the Missouri they traveled, Then slithered 'round the Snake River bend.
Shoshone and Hidatsu rest Ode to Sacagawea. This piece by poet Bert Huffman of Pendleton was probably written in commemoration of a bronze statue of Sacagawea created for the Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition, now located in Portland’s Washington Park.