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George Drouillard - Wikipedia George Drouillard (c 1773–1810) was a civilian interpreter, scout, hunter, and cartographer, hired for Lewis and Clark's Voyage of Discovery to explore the territory of the Louisiana Purchase in 1804–1806, in search of a water route to the Pacific Ocean
What happened to Drouillard - U. S. National Park Service If Lewis and Clark had a “go-to” guy, it was most certainly George Drouillard One of the few civilian members of the Corps, he was the son of a Shawnee mother and a French-Canadian father who served as an interpreter for General George Rogers Clark
George Drouillard - Discover Lewis Clark He was hired as a translator of Indian languages, but George Drouillard (1773–1810) also became useful as a French-language translator once the captains learned at Fort Mandan that they would need to trade with the Shoshones for horses
Last Stand Of A Shawnee Mountain Man - Frontier Partisans George Drouillard was a Tier One Frontier Partisan Half-French and half-Shawnee, he signed on with the Corps of Discovery as a hunter and sign language interpreter, and gave notable service to Captains Meriwether Lewis and William Clark
Montanas Mountain Men: George Drouillard - Big Sky Words George Drouillard made two journeys into the wild on his own, one in the spring of 1808, and one in the winter He roamed about Montana, visiting the Bighorn Basin and “Colter’s Hell,” as Yellowstone came to be called, as well as the Bighorn and Little Bighorn Rivers
From George Drouillard to his Sister - Oregon History Project George Drouillard, a member of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, wrote this letter to his sister on May 23, 1809 It was probably transcribed in about 1900 by Eva Emery Dye, a chronicler and novelist who lived in Oregon City
George Drouillard - oregonhist-ohp-dev. azurewebsites. net Unlike most of the men on the Expedition, Drouillard was not in the military but was instead hired as a civilian interpreter Drouillard’s skills as an outdoorsman and an Indian diplomat proved to be even more valuable than his proficiency at French and Indian sign language
“A Man of Much Merit” - Lewis and Clark in Kentucky Hired as a civilian interpreter and hunter in December 1803, Drouillard established his importance to the expedition even before his official hiring by traveling to Tennessee and escorting the group of army recruits that had missed the intended rendevous at Fort Massac to the Corps’ winter quarters
George Drouillard (1773-1810) Historical Marker George Drouillard, the son of a Shawnee mother and French-Canadian father, was one of the most valued members of the Lewis and Clark Expedition (A historical marker located near Three Forks in Gallatin County, Montana )
Fort Massac - Discover Lewis Clark George Drouillard went on to carry important messages for the Corps of Discovery Even before the expedition got underway, he delivered letters and necessary items between Lewis in St Louis and Clark at the Wood River campsite