A WESTWARD GLANCE
Sacajawea at Fort Mandan 1804
Original acrylic on board - 12"x 16", $900


A mere fourteen years of age and pregnant with her first child, Sacajawea
was experiencing major changes in her life by late 1804. In mid November,
the Corps of Discovery was moving into their unfinished cabins in the three
sided fort they had named Fort Mandan, and had hired Toussaint
Charbonneau, Sacajawea's husband as an interpreter for their planned trip
west in the spring. Ice was forming at the river's edge and the brutal northern
plains winter was at hand. Walking to the river for water, she steps up on the
roots of an old cottonwood tree and contemplates, child birth, the cold, and
the coming journey with these white strangers. In the spring she would go
west , become an integral part of the Missouri river's exploration and secure
an honored place in history.

On this snowy November evening , before heading back to her chores in the
fort, she pauses for one last westward glance.

Kyle Carroll - May 2002


Kyle Carroll
Grand River Studios
2665 SE Sheridan Rd.
Maysville, MO 64469
816-449-5452
kylec@centurytel.net