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Charlottesville, Virginia Walking Tour
Item 3 of 8
Located at the intersection of Ridge and Main Street in Charlottesville, this statue of Sacagawea, William Clark, and Meriwether Lewis commemorates the 1803-1806 Lewis and Clark expedition. The statue is located in Midway Park, is a prominent historic and geographic position that predated the settlement of the town. The statue was erected in 1919 and is known as "Their First View of the Pacific." This was the first of three statues donated to Charlottesville by Paul Goodloe McIntire. In recent years, residents of the city have considered replacing this statue with one that better reflects the centrality of Sacagawea's contribution. The artist's decision to portray the Native American guide behind Clark and Lewis and in a manner that differs sharply from the heroic pose of the two European-American explorers has led to numerous conversations about the way monuments reflect choices about who should be included and how they should be depicted. More recent monumental depictions of the Lewis and Clark expedition usually include Sacagawea and York, an enslaved person of African descent who was also central to the success of the expedition. A recent monument in Kansas City, for example, depicts these four persons together and is known as the Corps of Discovery monument to further emphasize the important roles played by many diverse participants.

Lewis & Clark and Sacajawea Statue as it looks today

Lewis & Clark and Sacajawea Statue as it looks today

W. Dale Nelson, Interpreters with Lewis and Clark: The Story of Sacagawea and Toussaint Charbonneau-Click the link below for more about this book

W. Dale Nelson, Interpreters with Lewis and Clark: The Story of Sacagawea and Toussaint Charbonneau-Click the link below for more about this book

undated rendering of Paul McIntire

undated rendering of Paul McIntire

November 19, 1919 Daily Progress article on statue unveiling information. Courtesy of the Virginia Center for Digital History at the University of Virginian.

November 19, 1919 Daily Progress article on statue unveiling information. Courtesy of the Virginia Center for Digital History at the University of Virginian.

November 20, 1919 Daily Progress article on the Unveiling Program. Courtesy of the Virginia Center for Digital History at the University of Virginian.

November 20, 1919 Daily Progress article on the Unveiling Program. Courtesy of the Virginia Center for Digital History at the University of Virginian.

November 22, 1919 Daily Progress article on the unveiling. Courtesy of the Virginia Center for Digital History at the University of Virginian.

November 22, 1919 Daily Progress article on the unveiling. Courtesy of the Virginia Center for Digital History at the University of Virginian.

Plaque to Sacajawea that was added in 2009

Plaque to Sacajawea that was added in 2009
Commissioned in 1919 for the National Sculpture Society, this statue was created by Charles Keck. Keck also sculpted the nearby Thomas Jonathan Jackson Sculpture. In 1997 the statue was listed on National Register of Historic Places. 

The sculpture is an accurate historical depiction of all three explorers. The base of pink granite includes etchings of a brief description of the lives of the explorers as well as information about the exploration they completed together. Near this narrative section, one can also find images that represent important aspects of the journey, including hunting for buffalo, the exploration of rivers, tribal councils, animals such as the bald eagle, and the seals of the United States and the state of Virginia. The three figures face west, the direction of the Pacific Ocean.  The statue represents the first public depiction of the Corps of Discovery in Charlottesville and expresses the popular sentiments of the day towards exploration, national purpose and conquest of the wilderness in North America.

In 2009, the city of Charlottesville was pressured by American Indian organizations and descendants of Sacajawea to "set the record straight", because it was said by these two groups that Sacajawea's role with the Corps of Discovery was downplayed. The same year, the city added a plaque to the statue to correct the record.