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Search : chiefs

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The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • Besides, the captain somehow had to restore Sacagawea to health, for her and the baby's sake and for the expedition's, for she might be its chief resource when an opportunity arose to buy horses. To relieve her distress he erected a sailcloth awning over the rear of the pirogue and moved her into its shade.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • David Lavender
Western Historical Quarterly 33.1 (2002): 5–18
  • In the winter of 1804–5 the Mandan chief Black Cat shared time and space with African American York, Shawnee–French George Drouillard, Omaha–French Pierre Cruzatte, New Hampshire Yankee John Ordway, and the Shoshone–French child Jean Baptiste Charbonneau.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • James P. Ronda
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • He had left behind, in the leaky, unfinished hull of the President's House (now called the White House), a steward, a housekeeper, and three servants whose chief responsibility, until Jefferson returned, would be taking care of Meriwether Lewis.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • David Lavender
Western Historical Quarterly 35 (Spring 2004): 53–72. Copyright © 2004, Western History Association.)
  • The expedition arrived at the Omaha village in Nebraska in mid—October and built Fort Charles, approximately twenty miles south of present—day Sioux City, Iowa. The Omaha chief, Blackbird, had the reputation of being both difficult and tyrannical.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • Thomas C. Danisi and W. Raymond Wood
Lewis and Clark on the Great Plains A Natural History
  • The Lakotas honored the skunk for its refusal to retreat in the face of danger, and sometimes their chiefs tied the skins of skunks to their heels to symbolize the fact that they never ran from a battle.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • Paul A. Johnsgard
North Dakota Quarterly 71.2 (2004): 6–27.
  • On October 17, 1804, he wrote, "This Chief [Arketarnarshar of the Arikara] tells me of a number of their Treditions about Turtles, Snakes, & and the power of a perticiler rock or Cave on the next river which informs of ever thing none of those I think worth while mentioning."
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • Clay S. Jenkinson