Trail of Tears Essay

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    history classes today, a lot of important events are not talked about based how it makes our country look. The Trail of Tears is one of those events. The actual truth is surprising and also brutal. Around the 1830s, the Indian removal act was created. This act gave the “American man” the right to come into Indiana territory and move them to another area to claim the land as their own. The trail started in Northern Georgia in 1831 and ended in Oklahoma in 1840. At the beginning, they gathered all Indians

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    For those who did not agree with the moving, the the American army had to force them. The Cherokee tribe, was the main tribe who did not want to move. While living in the East, they made treaties with the Americans. Some Cherokees escaped the Trail of Tears by hiding in the Appalachian hills or also by taking shelter with some sympathetic white neighbors. The Cherokees were peaceful allies of the Americans, they later on asked the Supreme Court for help. The judges decided that they could stay in

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    The Trail of Tears represents one of the most catastrophic eras in the history of the United States. It was the start of the Cherokee tribe’s extermination. The Cherokee Indians have existed on this mainland way longer than anybody of British background however, they were removed in a ruthless style, from their homeland, on which they have lived for countless centuries. This paper will show and prove the detrimental effect it had on the Cherokee. It will be expressed through the way they existed

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    Essay about THE TRAIL OF TEARS

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    “Quantie’s weak body shuddered from a blast of cold wind. Still, the proud wife of the Cherokee chief John Ross wrapped a woolen blanket around her shoulders and grabbed the reins.” Leading the final group of Cherokee Indians from their home lands, Chief John Ross thought of an old story that was told by the chiefs before him, of a place where the earth and sky met in the west, this was the place where death awaits. He could not help but fear that this place of death was where his beloved people

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    The Trail of Tears was the result of the United States government’s treatment of the Cherokee Nation. The Cherokee was the last tribe to fight for their home in the Appalachian region of North and South Carolina, as well as in Georgia, Tennessee and Alabama. The Cherokee developed a republican government ruled by a constitution in 1820, much like that of the U.S. Despite their organization, they could not stop the settlers push for possession of the Cherokee territory, especially when gold was discovered

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    The “Trail of Tears,” was an unmitigated disaster-at least for the Native American Tribes involved. – (Page 269) “As the population grew, white citizens demanded that their governments, at both the state and national levels, do something about the Native American tribes in their midst who held claims to land …” – (Page 249) “The United States had recognized the Cherokee as a nation in a number of treaties, and in 1827 delegates of this tribe initiated action to draft a constitution that would more

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    The Trail of Tears refers to the forceful relocation and eventual movement of the Native American communities from the South Eastern regions of the U.S. as a result of the enactment of the Indian Removal Act in the year 1830. In the year 1838, in line with Andrew Jackson’s policy of the Indians’ removal, the Cherokee community was forced to surrender its land to the east of Mississippi River and migrate to the present day Oklahoma. This journey was referred to as the “Trail of Tears” mainly due to

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    NAP FERRARIS HIST 109 FILE REFLECTION #3 TRAIL OF TEARS: WE SHALL REMAIN – AMERICA THROUGH NATIVE EYES Before I took American History, movies about Indians and US Cavalry Troops influenced my childhood years. I even pretended as a US Cavalry trooper chasing Indians away and rescuing the settlers. The Cavalry represented strength, gallantry, and savior of the oppressed. However, after the lectures and the film, Trail of Tears, they provided me a new perception of the US Cavalry troops. The removal

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    Crow allied with the United States, other tribes stayed and fought for the land. A case in point, the Nez tribe tried fleeing to Canada never succeed. The Cherokees suffered hunger, exhaustion and diseases along their way, and that path known as “Trail of Tears.” Cherokees at the end relocated in present Oklahoma. For

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    Body One of the most heartbreaking events in the history of Native American tribes has been the Trail of Tears. This event targeted the five Indian tribes in the east: the Cherokee, Choctaw, Creek, Chickasaw, and Seminoles tribes. These tribes were all targeted by the United States government, but the tribe that was impacted the most was the Cherokee Nation. This all started in early 1830s when President Andrew Jackson devised a plan to remove all Native Americans from the east coast. Before 1830

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