Historical Figure

Francois Labiche

Private François Labiche was a French-Canadian and Omaha métis boatman and interpreter who served in the Corps of Discovery. Fluent in French and several Native languages, Labiche served as a critical link in the chain of translation during councils with Native nations, often translating between French and various indigenous languages. He was also one of the expedition's most skilled watermen, helping navigate the Missouri and Columbia Rivers. Labiche was among those who voted on the location of Fort Clatsop, making him one of the first people of partial African or Native American descent to participate in an American democratic process.

0 treaties 39 total items 39 mapped locations

Biography

Francois Labiche was a private in the Corps of Discovery who served as one of the expedition’s most important interpreters, speaking French, English, and several Native languages. His mixed French-Native heritage gave him cultural fluency that proved invaluable in diplomatic encounters.

Labiche was a skilled waterman and one of the most experienced rivermen in the party. He served as bowman on the red pirogue during the ascent of the Missouri — a critical position that required constant vigilance for sandbars, snags, and changing currents.

During the expedition’s diplomatic councils, Labiche often served in the “chain of interpretation” — Native language to French (through Labiche or Drouillard), French to English (through Charbonneau), allowing the captains to communicate with peoples they otherwise could not have reached.

After the expedition, Labiche largely disappeared from the historical record, likely returning to the fur trade along the Missouri River.

Related Locations

Pin color = Planning (1801–1804) Westward (1804–1805) Fort Clatsop (1805–1806) Return (1806) Post (1806–1812)
Master expedition route

Note: the longest gap between tagged appearances is about 14 months (Aug 19, 1804 → Oct 14, 1805). Francois Labiche may have been present in the corps during that span but is not named in the journals.

Journal Entries (39)

Winds Halt Progress Near Village with Thirty Horses
Apr 14, 1806
Reunion with Labiche After Passing the White River
Aug 29, 1806
Lewis's Detachment Rejoins Clark's Party at Last
Aug 12, 1806
Reuniting Horse and Canoe Parties at Madison River
Jul 13, 1806
Lean Brown Bear and Salmon Trout from Scarce Country
Jun 20, 1806
Sweat Treatment Revives Ailing Nez Perce Chief
Jun 5, 1806
Horse Butchered for Meat; Ordway Seeks Salmon
May 27, 1806
Ailing Nez Perce Chief Too Weak for Sweat
May 25, 1806
Indians Help Chase Wounded Deer Across River
May 23, 1806
Heavy Rain; Snow Costs Shannon and Colter Their Quarry
May 20, 1806
Drouillard's Strayed Horse Returned; Hohastillpilp Departs
May 16, 1806
Crossing the Flathead River; Chiefs Arrive Ceremoniously
May 14, 1806
Guides Disagree at Creek Fork on Route Forward
May 1, 1806
Charbonneau's Unpicketed Horses Delay Departure
Apr 23, 1806
Long Narrows Portage Completed; Four Horses Purchased
Apr 19, 1806
Reunited with Pryor; Rocky Mountain Shores Traveled
Apr 14, 1806
Labiche's Broken Sight Spoils Hunt; Chinook Chief Arrives
Mar 15, 1806
Volley of Shots Signals Hunters Found the Herd
Mar 14, 1806
Winds Detain Comowol; Bratton's Back Worsens
Mar 7, 1806
Collins Kills Three Elk at Point Adams
Mar 8, 1806
Elk Retreat to Mountains; Hunters Return Empty-Handed
Feb 24, 1806
Gass Returns with Eight Elk; Hides Distributed
Feb 19, 1806
Fresh Meat Sought for the Sick; Gibson Improving
Feb 17, 1806
Bark and Saltpeter Treatments for Bratton and Gibson
Feb 16, 1806
Reubin Field Kills Six Elk; Lost Canoe Recovered
Feb 5, 1806
Drewyer Returns Having Killed Seven Elk
Feb 3, 1806
Shannon Reports Ten Elk Killed in Difficult Terrain
Jan 27, 1806
Lean Elk Returned; Salt Supply Exhausted
Jan 22, 1806
Shannon and Labiche Return Having Killed Three Elk
Jan 21, 1806
Lewis Scouts River for Winter Quarters Site
Nov 29, 1805
Raft Crossing and Sturgeon Shared with Chinook
Nov 20, 1805
Giant Drifting Trees Threaten Canoes Near Pacific
Nov 9, 1805
Non-Swimmers Sent Overland Below the Great Shute
Nov 2, 1805
Fog Delays; Hunters Bring Buck and Geese
Nov 3, 1805
Submerged Stumps and Cascades on a Rainy Descent
Oct 30, 1805
Drouillard's Canoe Strikes Rock at Three-Mile Rapid
Oct 14, 1805
Grass Specimens Collected Near 99th Meridian
Aug 17, 1804
Council with Oto and Missouri Chiefs at Bluffs
Aug 19, 1804
Drouillard's Party Sent to Apprehend Deserter Reed
Aug 7, 1804

Cross-Narrator Analyses

AI-assisted scholarly analyses that cite or discuss Francois Labiche — showing 3 of the most recent matches.

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