No, Sacajawea was Native American. She was born into the Shoshone tribe.
yes
She was a Native American.
yes an shoshone indian
Sacagawea was an native American Indian part of the shoshone tribe
She was a Shoshone Indian that lived in which is Idaho today.
the shoshone which Sacajawea was originally from
Sacajawea was a shoshone Indian princess.One day when Sacajawea and her brother were hunting the minnetaree Indians attacked their shoshone village.They killed Sacajawea's father and captured Sacajawea,other children and women.So she went from being a princess to slave.After when she was to old to be a slave they traded her to charbonneanu who was a trapper in canda. . Sacajawea's shoshone name was Boinai which meant ''Grass Maiden. The name Sacajawea ment ''Bird Woman''.
No, Sacajawea is not part of Black History Month. Sacajawea was a Shoshone Indian. She worked with Lewis and Clark on their exploration.
Sacajawea's religion was tribal religion (what ever her tribe believed in.)
shoshone
When she was 12, she was captured and taken to the Hidasta tribe and was forced to work. She was a Shoshone Indian previously.
Sacajawea has 1 brother and he is chief of shoshone.
yes