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Chandler, Katherine

"The Bird-Woman of the Lewis and Clark Expedition"


There the Americans found her.
She was glad when her husband said he would go West with Lewis and
Clark.
She thought she would see her own tribe again.


an i mals coun try friends
med i cine read y chiefs
froz en plants wrote
fort sweat house

AT FORT MANDAN.
The soldiers called their winter camp Fort Mandan. They had a hard
winter there.
It was so cold that many men were ill.
They had no time to be ill.
They had to work to be ready to go West when Spring opened.
The captains wrote in their books about the Indians and animals and
plants they had seen.
They made maps of the country they had come through.
They had long talks with the Indian chiefs.
They made friends with the Indians by giving them medicine.
An Indian boy had his feet frozen near the soldiers' camp.
The captains kept him until his feet were well again.
His people all came and thanked the captains.
[Illustration: AN INDIAN SWEAT-HOUSE]
The Indians told each other about the white men's medicine.
They said, "The white men's medicine is better than our sweat-house."
So they came for miles to the white camp to get the medicine.
They gave the captains food.
They wanted to be friends with them.

ar rows din ner hunt ed
mon ey beads fid dle
knives pie ces blan kets
gal lons med als stove

The soldiers hunted animals for food and for their skins.
One soldier cut an old stove into pieces.
The Indians wanted these pieces to make arrows and knives.


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