Sacagawea's Son: The Life of Jean Baptiste Charbonneau Sacagawea's Son: The Life of Jean Baptiste Charbonneau

Sacagawea's Son: The Life of Jean Baptiste Charbonneau

by Marion Tinling, M Tinling
Sacagawea's Son: The Life of Jean Baptiste Charbonneau Sacagawea's Son: The Life of Jean Baptiste Charbonneau

Sacagawea's Son: The Life of Jean Baptiste Charbonneau

by Marion Tinling, M Tinling

Paperback

$12.00 

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Overview

When the explorers Lewis and Clark asked the Shoshone woman Sacagawea and her husband, French trapper Toussaint Charbonneau, to act as interpreters for their expedition, the couple brought along their two-month-old son, Jean Baptiste. Over the course of the two-year journey, baby Baptiste won the hearts of the rough men of the corps. Captain Clark called him "my little dancing boy." But the rest of the story of this intriguing young figure has been largely untold--until now.
Sacagawea's Son: The Life of Jean Baptiste Charbonneau tells the action-packed, sometimes poignant story of a boy born to adventure. Baptiste's experiences with the Corps of Discovery were only the beginning. Educated in St. Louis by Captain Clark, he went on to live in a royal palace in Europe and to speak many languages. But, truly his parents' son, he returned to the American West, living out his life as a trapper, scout, and explorer alongside the likes of Kit Carson, James Bridger, and John Fremont. Readers ages ten and up will thrill to this lively and fascinating account of the life of Jean Baptiste Charbonneau--a child chosen by history.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780878424320
Publisher: Mountain Press Publishing Company, Inc.
Publication date: 02/03/2009
Series: Lewis & Clark Expedition
Pages: 125
Product dimensions: 6.02(w) x 9.08(h) x 0.37(d)
Age Range: 10 - 14 Years

About the Author

A native of New York state, Marion Tinling took a "temporary" job as a research assistant at the Huntington Library in San Marino, California, during the Great Depression, and "by sheer doggedness I managed to stay there nineteen years." Later she held various editorial jobs and retired in 1986, only to begin another career as a freelance writer. She has authored numerous articles and several books, specializing in women's history. A mother of three and grandmother of seven, she lives in Sacramento, California.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgmentsvi
A Note on Spelling and Pronunciationvii
Introduction1
1Born to Travel, 1805 to 18065
2Indian Boy, 1806 to 180915
3School Days, 1809 to 182321
4Princely Years, 1823 to 182931
5Greenhorn Mountain Man, 183039
6Rough Living and Rendezvous, 1830 to 183951
7Changing Times and New Adventures, 1839 to 184363
8Bent's Fort Hunter, 1843 to 184675
9The Long March, 1846 to 184783
10California Years and the End of the Trail, 1847 to 186695
Epilogue105
Guide to Charbonneau's West109
Bibliography115
Index121
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