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On
the Trail of
Sacagawea
By Peter Lourie
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In 1804 Lewis
and Clark and a small band of adventurers calling themselves
the Corps of Discovery set off on a great journey into the
unknown. They left the Mississippi to travel up the Missouri
River and over the Rocky Mountains to the Pacific Ocean.
It would take Lewis and Clark more than two years and eight
thousand miles of travel to complete the round-trip.
Near what is now Washburn, North Sakota, Lewis and Clark met a young Shoshone woman who would make an invaluable contribution to the expedition. Sacagawea was no more than sixteen years old when she joined the Corps of Discovery. She negotiated with native peoples, helped the expedition survive when food was scarce, and, ultimately, contributed to leading this small band of intruders through an Indian land to the "great waters," the Pacific Ocean.
One summer, Peter Lourie and his family traveled in the footsteps of Sacagawea. Beginning at the confluence of the Missouri and Knife Rivers in North Dakota, the Louries followed Sacaqawea's trail in order to see what she might have seen nearly two centruries ago and to learn what they could about Sacagawea from the native peoples who live along her trail today.
American Bookseller "Pick of the Lists" Spring 2001
Reviews:
"Acclaimed author/photographer Peter Lourie, known for his
exceptional nonfiction books about regions in the world
(e.g., Rio Grande, Yukon, Everglades), records his family's
trip from the confluence of the Missouri and Knife Rivers
to the Pacific Ocean--the same route Sacagawea and the Corps
of Discovery took in 1804. With words and exceptionally
clear and detailed photographs, his comparisons of the 20th
Century land and cultures to those experienced 200 years
ago by Sacagawea, as well as detailed historical information,
will engage readers of all ages. Among other things, his
wife, two children, and Peter slept in a teepee, crossed
the Lemhi pass, panned for gold, and met with native peoples
who live along the trail today. Mr. Lourie has written an
important book, not only chronicling Sacagawea's invaluable
contribution to the Lewis and Clark expedition, but also
celebrating the love between a family learning and exploring
together." -
New Favorites--Outstanding Books for Children
hipfish , March 2001
Joann Lum
"In this handsome book, archaeologist and researcher Lourie
chronicles a trip he too with his family along the path
of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, beginning where Sacagawea
joined the explorers and hoping to compare what exists now
with what Sacagawea might have seen. The family traveled
through Native American land where historic sites remain
untouched and the people practice traditional customs, fishing
in the streams that the explorers fished in, swimming in
the same hot springs, and eventually arriving at a reconstructed
Fort Clatsop, where the river meets the ocean. Throughout,
Lourie intersperses his family's adventures with the history
of the Corps of Discovery in a comparison that conveys the
rugged beauty and harsh terrain that the explorers must
have experienced. The book is illustrated with the author's
striking color photographs, as well as paintings and archival
photos. An epilogue offers different theories of what became
of Sacagawea." -
Booklist , May 1, 2001
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