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Vocabulary words:

  • ago              
  • hundred                  
  • Sacajawea              
  • years

THE BIRD-WOMAN

The Bird-Woman was an Indian.
She showed the white men the way into the West.
There were no roads to the West then.
That was one hundred years ago.
This Indian woman took the white men across streams.
She took them over hills.
She took them through bushes.
She seemed to find her way as a bird does.
The white men said, “She goes like a bird.
We will call her the Bird-Woman.”
Her Indian name was Sacajawea.

Vocabulary Words:

  • Clark
  • American                  
  • Lewis                  
  • met            
  • captains            
  • part                              
  • soldiers              
  • twenty-nine
  • people              
  • Missouri River

WHO THE WHITE MEN WERE.

The white men Sacajawea went with were soldiers.
There were twenty-nine soldiers.
There were two captains.
The name of one captain was Lewis.
The name of the other captain was Clark.
They were American soldiers.

1

They carried the American flag into the West.
No white men knew about that part of the West then.
The captains wished to learn all about the West.
They wished to tell the people in the East about it.
They had been going West a long time before they met Sacajawea.
They had rowed up the Missouri River.
They had come to many little streams.
They did not know what the Indians called these streams.
So they gave them new names for the white men.

Vocabulary Words:

  • camp
  • Fourth of July
  • Mandan
  • cheered
  • Frenchman
  • rested
  • ice
  • Independence Creek
  • husband
  • Kansas
  • snow

On Fourth of July they named one stream Fourth of July Creek.
They named another Independence Creek.
We still call this stream by that name.
You can find it on the map of Kansas.
On Fourth of July the men rested.
The soldier who woke first fired a gun.
Then they all woke up and cheered for the Fourth of July.
At night they fired another gun.
Then the soldiers danced around the camp fire.
After a time the ice and snow would not let them go on.
They made a winter camp near the Mandan Indians.
Here they met Sacajawea and her husband.
Her husband was a Frenchman who knew a little about the West.
Sacajawea was the only one there who had been to the far West.
Lewis and Clark told the Frenchman they would pay him to go with them.
He said he would go.
Then he and Sacajawea came to live at the soldiers’ camp.

Comments on: "The Bird-Woman of the Lewis and Clark Expedition: First three sections" (1)

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