Sacagawea gives birth to Pompey
Sacagawea the Shoshone Indian interpreter and guide to the Lewis and Clark expedition gives birth to her first child Jean Baptiste Charbonneau.Meriwether Lewis and William Clark first met the young Sacagawea while spending the winter among the Mandan Indians along the Upper Missouri River not far from present-day Bismarck North Dakota.Still only a teenager Sacagawea was the wife of a French-Canadian fur trapper Toussaint Charbonneau who had purchased her from Hidatsa kidnappers the year before.The Hidatsa had taken Sacagawea from her homeland along the Continental Divide in modern-day southwestern Montana and southeastern Idaho where she was the daughter of a prominent Shoshone chief.
Viewing such captives as little more than slaves the Hidatsa were happy to sell Sacagawea and another woman to Charbonneau who used them as laborers porters and sexual companions.That winter Lewis and Clark hired Charbonneau as an interpreter for their projected expedition to the Pacific and back provided he agreed to bring along his young wife.Lewis and Clark knew they would have to obtain horses from the Shoshone to cross the Continental Divide and Sacagaweas services as an interpreter could prove invaluable.Charbonneau agreed and she became the only woman to join the Corps of Discovery.Two months before the expedition was to depart Lewis and Clark found themselves with another co-traveler who later proved useful in an unexpected way.
On this day in 1805 Sacagawea went into labor.Lewis who would often act as the expeditions doctor in the months to come was called on for the first and only time during the journey to assist in a delivery.Lewis was anxious to insure his new Shoshone interpreter was in good shape for the arduous journey to come and he later worriedly reported her labour was tedious and the pain violent.
Told that a small amount of the rattle of rattlesnake might speed the delivery Lewis broke up a rattler tail and mixed it with water.She had not taken [the mixture] more than ten minutes before she brought forth Lewis happily reported.Named Jean Baptiste Charbonneau the cries of the healthy young boy announced the arrival of a new member of the Corps of Discovery.No one it seemed contemplated leaving Sacagawea and her infant son behindwhen the party set out up the Missouri in April 1805 Sacagawea carried Jean Baptiste on her back in an Indian cradleboard.
Nicknamed Pomp or Pompey by Clark who developed a strong attachment to the boy Jean Baptiste accompanied his mother on every step of her epic journey to the Pacific and back.Mother and son both were invaluable to the expedition.As hoped Sacagaweas services as a translator played a pivotal role in securing horses from the Shoshone.Jean Baptistes presence also proved unexpectedly useful by helping to convince the Indians the party encountered that their intentions were peaceful-no war party the Indians reasoned would bring along a mother and infant.When the Corps of Discovery returned east in 1805 Charbonneau Sacagawea and Jean Baptiste resumed the fur-trading life.
Little is known of Sacagaweas subsequent fate though a fur trader claimed she died of a putrid fever in 1812 at a Missouri River trading post.True to a promise he had made to Sacagawea during the expedition Clark paid for Jean Baptistes education at a St.Louis Catholic academy and became something of an adoptive father to the boy.
A bright and charismatic young man Jean Baptiste learned French German and Spanish hunted with noblemen in the Black Forest of Germany traveled in Africa and returned to further explore the American West.He died in 1866 en route to the newly discovered gold fields of Montana.