Sacagawea is a Shoshone Indian who helped navigate during the Lewis and Clark expedition. Her name means “Bird Woman’’ in Shoshone and “Boat Launcher’’ in Hidatsa. Sacagawea was born in 1788 Lemhi County, Idaho. Sacagawea is the daughter of the Shoshone chief. She not only helped navigate around the wilderness, but she was a good spokesperson between the Native Americans and explorers.
Sacagewea Sacagewea was born around 1788 in Lenhi River Valley. Which in present day is near Shashone Idah. Sacagewea is an Shashone American Indian and spoke Shashone, Hidatsa, and English.
Do you know King Kamehameha? King Kamehameha was a strong and great leader that wanted to take control of all the Hawaiian Islands. He was also born at Kohala at 1758. But have you ever wondered why King Kamehameha I was on the 50th State quarter? It is such an honor to represent our state on such a national level.
Some more facts about the Hidatsa tribe are that they do sun dances and vision quests and for transportation they used small boats. Next we are going to talk about the leaders of the
Kamehameha was a warrior before the unification of the Hawaiian Islands. Kamehameha was just a district chief on the Big Island and Kamehameha soon ruled the Big Island after he and his men became stronger, He soon ruled other islands one at a time until eventually he had unified all the Hawaiian islands. Kamehameha was very smart in battles, using foreign weapons and foreign battle strategies then Kamehameha became an administrator after the unification. Kamehameha was an effective leader because he was smart, cared for the land, and cared for his
The Franklin people also made temporary preparations for the soldiers returning from the battle by arranging warm places for them to sleep. Several of them even placed straw and beds on the school/meeting house floor. Later on, sleighs and teams belonging to the settlers would help carry the soldiers back to Camp Douglas. In addition to aiding Connor’s troops, the Franklin settlers also were able to send reports of the battle back to Brigham Young in Salt Lake City, as well as Ezra T. Benson and Peter Maughan in Wellsville. However, during the following summer of 1863, in retribution for believing that the Franklin settlers had aided Colonel Connor several Shoshoni Indians attacked settlers William Howell and Andrew Morrison.
Chief Washakie What event in history made him memorable Chief Washakie earned his Reputation by being a fierce Warrior, diplomat, skilled politician, a great leader of the Shoshone people, he loved to go to war, and he had a ton of determination, and he was a friend to the white man. At first Chief, Washakie was not very famous. But he ended up becoming very memorable because he was a brave and good leader.(johnson3) He was born in 1804, or somewhere in that time no one knew (Washakie means shoots straight or shoots on the Fly) his father was a flathead and Indian
The Shoshone were nomadic, meaning that they never stayed and settled in one place. They followed their food source and carried their homes with them. That is why the horse is so important to the shoshone. They also weaved like the Navajo by making baskets and other things. The Shoshoni in the mountains were very warlike and
Did you know that a forgotten man named Hiawatha influenced how the US was created and our lives today also? Hiawatha was born somewhere around 1550 A.D., and his death is unknown. He was a Native American and a member of the Mohawk tribe. With his ideas, he changed the US forever. Hiawatha should be on the 1 dollar bill because even though his whole family was murdered and he got rejected for his ideas, he still did so many amazing things that still affect us today.
This discovery was human civilization on this land. These people had fascinating lifestyles, languages, and religions totalling into a completely different culture. These people are known as Native Americans. The Native Americans are proven to have been on the North American continent for close to 50,000
The Mohawk Indians were part of the Iroquois confederacy. They spoke similar languages to other tribes part of the confederacy. Their economy was based on trading goods between tribes and to the Europeans. They were settled near the Mohawk river and the Hudson. After coming in contact with the Europeans, they became one of the wealthiest tribes in the confederacy.
1. Paleo-Indians Paleo-Indians are described as the initial Americans, those who set forth the preliminaries of Native American culture. They trekked in bands of around fifteen to fifty individuals, around definite hunting terrains, establishing traditional gender roles of hunter-gatherers. It is agreed that such Paleo-Indians began inhabiting America after the final Ice Age, and that by 1300 B.C.E. human communities had expanded to the point of residing in multiple parts of North America. As these early Native Americans spread out, their sites ranged anywhere from northern Canada to Monte Verde, Chile.
Compare and Contrast the Native American Culture Introduction The Native Americans were the original owners of the United States of America. However, due to the population increase in Europe, the European migrated to America in seek of land for farming, settlement, and spread their religion (Desai, n.p). The two communities lived together and interacted with each other.
In the morality play, “An Inspector Calls”, Priestley employs the concept of responsibility to express the haunting effects of individualism on people’s lives. Priestley introduces the theme of responsibility by utilizing the omniscient inspector Goole to advance the socialist viewpoint that each of us must be accountable for both our own deeds and the way we treat others. However, he contrasts this philosophy with the usage of figures like Mr. and Mrs. Birling, who are the complete antitheses of Priestley's message; they lack accountability and are self-centred, heartless, and prejudiced. Priestley portrays Mr. and Mrs. Birling as intolerant and selfish figures as a method to criticise the upper-middle class. The unity of the socialist ideologies
Native Americans Native Americans are very different from other tribes. They eat, live, dress and do many things differently. The things I’m going to be talking about in my interesting paper is What they eat? What they wear? Where they live?