Sacajawea statue at Sacajawea State Park in Pasco, WA |
Jean Baptiste was born in 1805 to Sacajawea and her
French-Canadian husband, Toussaint Charbonneau.
The family joined Lewis and Clark in 1805 in what is now North Dakota.
The Shoshone Indian teenager and her husband served as guides and interpreters
for the two explorers. Perhaps the trip inspired Jean Baptiste to become an
explorer when he grew up. Or perhaps it was that he lived with William Clark in
St. Louis as he was growing up. Clark paid for the boy’s education at a Jesuit
academy there.
He was out on his own by age 18, working at a trading post
in Kansas when he met a German duke who stopped there during his natural
history expedition. Jean Baptiste accompanied him when he returned to Germany
where he lived for six years, learning how to speak German and Spanish in
addition to the French, English and Shoshone he already spoke.
He returned to St. Louis in 1829 where he became a fur trapper
in the West. Later on, he would become a scout, guide and hunter for the Army
as it moved across the West. He served
as a scout for the Mormon Battalion that blazed a wagon trail across the
southwest in 1846 in an effort to keep Mexico from invading this area. The battalion
camped a night in Yuma, Arizona, before crossing the Colorado River downstream
the next day. His name is engraved on a plaque that surrounds the statue.
When the journey was over, he returned to the California
territory where he served as mayor of a town for a few years. Jean Baptiste
eventually returned to Oregon where he died in 1866.
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