The Trail of Tears is a very significant part of American history, whether you think it is right or wrong, it was a huge impact on the United States America. This movement particularly involves the Cherokee Indians. The Cherokee were removed forcefully, but also violently from their cherished lands. This obviously had a tremendous effect on the Cherokee and would change their entire culture forever. Everything for this great country of the United States of American came at the expense of a lot of innocent people and the Trail of Tears is a fine example of that.
The Native Americans didn’t have any conflicts with anyone besides themselves for centuries, but in the year 1540 that completely changed. In that year Hernando de Soto came in contact
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The Cherokee took a lot of pride in they were and what they stood for (Funk & Wagnalls 2016). The Cherokee economy was much like other economies in the southeast, it was based on intensive agriculture such as: corn, beans, and squash (Funk & Wagnalls 2016). However, the Cherokee did adopt Western methods of living, including a plantation system (Funk & Wagnalls 2016). Animals such as: deer, bear, and elk were also hunted for livelihood (Funk & Wagnalls 2016). The Cherokee tribe greatly respected one another, when someone spoke, they spoke one at a time (Funk & Wagnalls 2016). Cherokee men had three main activities they did, go hunting, play ball games, and go to war (Funk & Wagnalls 2016). The ball games the Cherokee played were taken very seriously. Intense training would go into them and they would have to limit their diets (Funk & Wagnalls 2016). The rules during the games were also very serious, and if any player broke the rules, they would be subject to be humiliated in public (Funk & Wagnalls 2016). Overall the Cherokee were very polite and showed great respect to one …show more content…
The United States would eventually recognize the Cherokee as a nation. American citizens still would move into the Cherokees land and push them out. This would start the of the long list of problems between the United States and the Cherokee (Funk & Wagnalls 2016). In 1828 Georgia passed a law that on June 1st 1830 the Cherokee Nation would be null and void, and Georgia would no longer recognize the Cherokee as a nation (Funk and Wagnalls 2016). In July 1829 another misfortune would happen for the Cherokee (Funk and Wagnalls). Gold was found in the Cherokee Nation, so miners went there and took control over the Cherokee in hopes of getting rich (Funk & Wagnalls 2016). The gold was very easy to obtain, it was found on the ground and throughout the streams (Funk & Wagnalls 2016). Not only did the minor invade their land, but they destroyed it and would beat the Cherokee people ( Funk & Wagnalls). The Cherokee begged for help, but would receive none from the United States (Funk & Wagnalls 2016). The Cherokee took matters into their own hands, led by Major Ridge, they gathered up the white families, gave them time to leave the land, and threatened them to stay off their land, and finally the Cherokee burned the Americans houses down (Funk & Wagnalls 2016). This did not sit well with the states and was seen as an act of hostility, so things would only get worse from the
The Cherokee Nation was the largest of Five Civilized Tribes of the southeast. They are a people of Iroquois descent. The
The Cherokee Indians were one of the most heavily populated of the southeast and did not agree to simply give up their land. The Cherokee Indians had been harmonious to the Americans so they inquired for some help. It was decided that the Cherokee Indians could be able to keep their land. Regardless President Andrew Jackson and his army
The Cherokee people were forced out of their land because of the settler’s greed for everything and anything the land had to offer. Many Cherokee even embraced the “civilization program,” abandoning their own beliefs so that they may be accepted by white settlers. Unfortunately for the Cherokee though, the settlers would never accept them as an equal citizen. A quote from historian Richard White says it very well, “The Cherokee are probably the most tragic instance of what could have succeeded in American Indian policy and didn’t. All these things that Americans would proudly see as the hallmarks of civilization are going to the West by Indian people. They do everything they were asked except one thing. What the Cherokees ultimately
Cherokee nations were greatly impacted by the historic events of Andrew Jackson being elected president, Gold Rush, and the stereotype of the indian nation being savages. The Cherokee nation is very overlooked and stepped on. Georgia's gold rush was a big event that lead to the Trail of Tears. As miners make their way into the Cherokee land it was called the Great Intrusion, with no thought of the Native Americans feelings. The gold rush led to 1,000 people moving into the sacred land. The Army then ended up driving the Cherokee people to the north. Gold was more important than a human life because Native Americans were just looked as animals. Gold caused the death and suffrage of thousands of Native Americans. The Cherokee giving gold to the white man was the Cherokee handing their life to their killer.
In 1830, gold was found in Western Georgia. Unfortunately, The Cherokee had lots of land there. Settlers ignored that and began to invade western Georgia. President Andrew Jackson then decided to sign the Indian Removal Act, because he believed that assimilation wouldn’t work. This act gave him power to order the removal of any tribe at any time. In 1835, The Treaty of New Echota was signed, which said that the Cherokee would leave their land and walk to Oklahoma. They refused to leave so after two years, they were forced out. Andrew Jackson and the U.S. Government had many reasons for the removal of the Cherokee people, but the Cherokee also had many reasons for why it shouldn’t have happened. Eventually, their removal had devastating effects on the Cherokee culture.
The Trail of Tears played a part in what is known as the Manifest Destiny, which was the expansion of the colonists to the west. Gold was found on the Cherokee land during the Georgia Gold Rush. The greed that it created was one of the leading causes of the Trail of Tears where thousands of Native Americans were forcibly relocated from their native lands (Cherokee.org). Little did the Native Americans realize that the new nation that was going to be forming around them would affect not only their lives but the lives of their descendants. Even though the Cherokee made efforts to keep their land through the court system and even attempted to assimilate to the American way of life it was to no avail. They tried to agree to treaties with the United States Government. Even though, they were eventually forced to leave their lands. By forcing the Native Americans to abandon their homes, robbing their lands, taking their freedom, and forcing them to adapt and to assimilate into a new land and culture showed how vindictive President Andrew Jackson was regarding the Native Americans. The Trail of Tears was an instance of the United States Government committing genocide against the Native Americans
First of all, the Cherokee were residents of Georgia, North and South Carolina,Virginia,Kentucky,and Tennessee. During, the 1800's on the Trail of Tears many
The Trail of Tears is one of the most shameful episodes in the history of the United States for many reasons. This chain of expulsions forced Indian populations from their ancestral lands in the Southeastern United States to settle in a region west of the Mississippi River that had been selected as Indian Territory. Encouraged by white settlers, the U.S. government suddenly ruled that it was time for the Indians to sacrifice land that they had called home for thousands of years. Stricken with a hunger for gold and a thirst for territorial expansion, the Anglo people betrayed their Indian neighbors. The sequence of forced removals were made possible by numerous government powers
The Cherokee are an indigenous people of the Southeastern Woodlands. Although they were not considered states at this time, they would have been in present day Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina and Georgia. However, in 1938 the Cherokees found an abundant amount of gold which left the United States in a scramble. Thus, President Johnson signed the removal act, which forced the Cherokees East of the Mississippi into the Great Plains and then went into dig up gold. The Cherokees thrived in the Great Plains, becoming farmers and excellent hunters. They settled along the Arkansas River, becoming fisherman. Just as it happened in 1938 the Cherokees were eventually forced off their lands and into the Oregon Territory. This trail they walked along was called the trail of tears, many Cherokees died because of food deprivation or various diseases. Today, this Trail of Tears is seen as the worst displays of discrimination in the history of the United States. Thus, we gave the Cherokees Reservations to live on in the Western United States. This journey they faced is arguably the hardest journey any tribe has ever faced and the way the Cherokees overcame this and turned their tribe into what it is today is what makes it special.
They are one of the largest Native American tribes in the U.S. They lived in wattle and daub houses. The Cherokee were part of a historic event called Trail Of Tears. This gave away all Cherokee land to the United States in exchange for land in Oklahoma.
Since international law said that England had discovered the American colonies, they therefore owned all of the land. That meant that the natives or "uncivilized" people no longer owned the land. This group of the "uncivilized" consisted of many Indian tribes which were forced out of their homeland, including the Cherokee.
The Trail of Tears was a route that the Cherokee Indians had to travel on when they were forcibly removed from their homes in the southern Appalachian Mountains. They were made to travel miles and miles away from their homes, so the residents of Georgia could begin looking for gold. All of this began because in 1829 when someone found gold on Cherokee land. The Cherokee were going to be forced out of their homes so they decided to take their case to court. The case went all the way up to the supreme court and was then voted on in the Cherokee's favor, but President Andrew Jackson went against the courts ruling and allowed the Cherokee to be removed from their homes. The Trail of Tears is a terrible route where over 2,000 Cherokee lives were lost, and many became sick and injured. Even though the Cherokee had the rights to the land and they even had their own constitution, still Jackson ignored this and allowed them to be removed. This was a terrible time in American history because it showed how malicious one of our presidents was in allowing these peaceful Indians to be taken away from their homes, just so we could find some gold.
The Cherokee Indians are one of the most well-known American Indian tribes here in the U.S. However, once the Europeans came to the new world and started to expand their territory, this did not bode well for them. Many tribes were enraged by the expansion into Native American lands. Even when the Europeans had promised that they would not encroach onto their lands. Gold was said to be on the lands of the Cherokee and this made the Europeans want to break their promise to the Indians even more so now that they knew that gold was said to be there.
The name “Trail of Tears” began in 1831 with the removal of the Choctaw Nation but would be traveled by many. This long journey would be the end of many Native Americans. The Cherokee would be the hardest hit during this relocation and would come from a surprising friend so the Cherokee thought. The man that started and ended this push would be someone the Cherokee fought alongside years before.
However, many of the members of the tribe disagreed and continued to move away to Arkansas to escape the shites. Some Americans could not wait for any further moving of the Indians, turned up on the Indian land, and started settling. Andrew Jackson wanted all of the Indians to be removed east of the Mississippi River so when he was elected President in 1828, the Indians were in trouble. Congress passed the Indian Removal Acts in 1830, which gave the President of the United States the power to force all the Indians to relocate west of the Mississippi. If that weren't enough of a reason to have the Indians leave the territory, gold was discovered in the Cherokee area that same year. At this point, people from all over were traveling to Georgia to find some fold for themselves.