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Edward Rose, an escaped enslaved mixed-race man, helps guide multiple expeditions.
1807
Edward Rose accompanied the Manuel Lisa trapping expedition as a guide, hunter, and interpreter. Rose, an escaped enslaved man of Black, White, and Cherokee blood, was also part of the 1809 escort that took Mandan chief Big White back to his home after traveling with the Louis and Clark party. Rose's knowledge of the topography of the Upper Missouri region and of the languages and customs of Indian tribes made him invaluable to these and other exploration and trading ventures. In 1823, as part of William H. Ashley's second trapping venture, Rose distinguished himself by negotiating peace after a battle with the Arikara Indians; this secured a safe Missouri River passage to the Rockies. Rose was apparently also instrumental in taming a tribe of 600 Crow Indians during an 1825 treaty-making expedition into the Upper Missouri.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.