Historical Figure
Jean Baptiste Charbonneau
Jean Baptiste Charbonneau, nicknamed "Pomp" or "Little Pomp" by William Clark, was born to Sacagawea and Toussaint Charbonneau at Fort Mandan on February 11, 1805, just two months before the expedition departed westward. He is the youngest known member of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, having been carried by his mother across the Rocky Mountains, down the Columbia River, and to the Pacific Ocean as an infant. After the expedition, William Clark took a personal interest in his education, and Jean Baptiste later traveled to Europe with Prince Paul of Württemberg, becoming fluent in English, French, German, and Spanish.
0 treaties
46 total items
46 mapped locations
Related Locations
Journal Entries (46)
Clark: September 7, 1806
Clark: August 8, 1806
Clark: August 4, 1806
Clark: July 23, 1806
Lewis: June 8, 1806
Clark: June 8, 1806
Lewis: June 5, 1806
Clark: June 5, 1806
Lewis: June 3, 1806
Clark: June 3, 1806
Lewis: May 29, 1806
Lewis: May 28, 1806
Clark: May 29, 1806
Clark: May 26, 1806
Clark: May 25, 1806
Lewis: May 24, 1806
Clark: May 24, 1806
Lewis: May 23, 1806
Clark: May 23, 1806
Clark: April 3, 1806
Clark: March 1, 1806
Clark: February 22, 1806
Clark: February 2, 1806
Lewis: January 28, 1806
Clark: January 28, 1806
Lewis: January 24, 1806
Clark: January 9, 1806
Lewis: August 19, 1805
Lewis: July 13, 1805
Clark: June 29, 1805
Clark: April 12, 1805
Clark: March 19, 1805
Clark: February 23, 1805
Clark: January 31, 1805
Clark: January 27, 1805
Clark: January 10, 1805
Clark: October 29, 1804
Clark: October 16, 1804
Clark: October 12, 1804
Clark: August 31, 1804
Farewell to Charbonneau, Sacagawea, and Little Pomp
Clark at Pompeys Pillar
Departure from Fort Clatsop — Heading Home
Sacagawea Insists on Seeing the Whale
Birth of Jean Baptiste Charbonneau
Departure from Fort Mandan — Into the Unknown