
Statue photo courtesy of the artist, Agnes Vincen Talbot. |

Meet the model for the coin.
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Our parents and grandparents learned all about her.
Our children know about her, too, as today her
story is taught in classrooms across our nation.
Sacagawea was the Shoshone Indian who assisted
the historic Lewis and Clark expedition.
Between 1804-1806, while still a teenager,
she guided the adventurers from the Northern
Great Plains to the Pacific Ocean and back.
Her husband, Toussaint Charbonneau, and their
son who was born during the trip, Jean
Baptiste, also accompanied the group.
Without Sacagawea's navigational, diplomatic,
and translating skills, the famous Lewis and Clark
expedition would have perished. For one, she helped
Lewis and Clark obtain the horses they needed to
continue their journey.
Now, almost 200 years later, the resourceful
Native American steps back into the limelight.
Sacagawea replaces suffragette Susan B.
Anthony as the image on the dollar coin.
Soon everyone who handles the Golden Dollar
will remember the brave 15-year-old
who, carrying
her child on her back, guided an
unprecedented mission.
More statues, streams, lakes, landmarks, parks,
songs, ballads, and poems honor this young woman
than any other woman in American history.
Yet, no portraits created during her lifetime
exist. Even Lewis and Clark's journals don't
include sketches or other clues as to what she
really looked like.
This appealed to the Dollar Coin Design
Advisory Committee (DCDAC) torn between
recommending a real person or an
allegorical image for the new coin.
Because no factual representations
of Sacagawea exist, her image has
been left largely to imagination,
much like an allegorical figure.
Read more about
her life and remarkable contributions to the Lewis and Clark expedition,
the debate over the spelling and pronunciation of her
name, or the model who inspired the image
on the new Golden Dollar.
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"The expedition hung in the balance in
many cases along the trail and it was Sacagawea's
participation that was so crucial to its
success."
Philip N. Diehl
U.S. Mint Director
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"Sacagawea" who accompanied you
that long dangerous and fatigueing rout to the
Pacific Ocean and back diserved a greater
reward for her attention and services on that
rout than we had in our power to give
her [sic].'"
L.M. Clark
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