
She
is the first woman to have circled the globe (at least, that we know
of)...but she had to pretend to be a man to do it!

Once
the Louis Antoine de Bougainville expedition reached Montevideo, in
what is now the nation of Uruguay in South America, Baret had to do
much of the hard work in collecting plants, since Commerson's leg had
an unhealed ulcer. She probably carried most of the supplies and
specimens, for example. The next port, Rio de Janeiro, found
Commerson supposedly confined to the ship until his leg healed.
However, he and Baret still managed to collect some specimens,
including a gorgeous flowering plant that Commerson named
Bougainvilla after the expedition leader. When they explored rugged
Patagonia, Baret gained a reputation with the entire expedition for
courage and strength, and the injured Commerson ruefully called her
his “beast of burden.” Baret not only helped collect plants,
stones, and shells, she also helped organize and catalog the
specimens and notes. Baret and Commerson had plenty of time to do so
while sailing across the Pacific Ocean from South America to Tahiti.
![]() |
Bougainvilla bush |
Once
in Tahiti, apparently, Baret was found out as a woman. Different
journals tell very different stories about how this discovery was
made (and even when and where, to some extent), but some time later,
when the ships landed in the French colony of Mauritius (an island in
the Indian Ocean), Baret and Commerson left the expedition to visit a
friend and fellow botanist.
The
two continued to collect botanical specimens on Mauritius, but
Commerson was running out of money and continuing to have health
problems. Suddenly, he died, and Baret had no way to get back to
France!
Baret got a job running a tavern on Mauritius, and about a year later she
married an officer in the French army who was on his way home. When
she finally did get back to France with her new husband, probably
nine years after she started out with Bougainville's expedition, she
was able to get the money left to her by Commerson's will. She and
her husband settled down in a peaceful little village.
Here's
a surprise: Baret was given a pension of 200 livres a year by the
Ministry of Marine, with these complimentary words:

I
love that she was given this respect and reward while she was still
living! So many women were hated during their lives but later
praised.
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on this date: