In 1800, when she was about 12 years old, Sacagawea was
kidnapped by a war party of Hidatsa Indians -- enemies of her people, the
Shoshones. She was taken from her Rocky Mountain homeland, located in today’s
Idaho, to the Hidatsa-Mandan villages near modern Bismarck, North Dakota.
There, she was later sold as a slave to Toussaint Charbonneau, a
French-Canadian fur trader who claimed Sacagawea and another Shoshone woman as
his “wives.” In November 1804, the Corps of Discovery arrived at the
Hidatsa-Mandan villages and soon built a fort nearby. In the American Fort
Mandan on February 11, 1805, Sacagawea gave birth to her son Jean-Baptiste
Charbonneau, who would soon become America’s youngest explorer.
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