The Trail of 2,200 Miles Introduction: HISTORICAL CONTEXT Throughout history there have been various explorations, encounters, and exchanges. The Trail of Tears covers all the three aspects of exploration, encounter, and exchange, and is only one of the many examples there are in the history of the United States. Cherokee Indians along with find themselves forcibly exploring lands west of the Mississippi River after President Andrew Jackson signs the Indian Removal Act in 1830. ("Trail of Tears")…
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Trail of Tears The Trail of Tears lasted from 1832 to 1838. Choctaw, Chickasaw, Seminole, and Cherokee Indians were all included in this dangerous journey. The Cherokees were the last to reach the Oklahoma Territory, reserved for them, after winning the Supreme Court case against Andrew Jackson. The history of the Trail of Tears includes the preparation, the journey, and the aftermath. The Indian Removal Act forced all Indians to move west of the Mississippi river. The Indians did not want…
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What can I learn from a journey and how can it affect my life? The trail of tears was a very sad time in American history. Many native Americans were forced to leave their homes and go to new places in the USA, this journey taught us important things about life and history of the world. We can learn to be kinder and more understanding to others by thinking about what the native Americans went through. We can also learn to appreciate our own culture and where we come from. firstly, a journey teaches…
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Onion, Amanda. “Trail of Tears: Definition, Date and Cherokee Nation | HISTORY.” HISTORY, 26 Sept. 2023, www.history.com/topics/native-american-history/trail-of-tears This article dives into how Native Americans occupied millions of acres with in Georgia, Tennessee, Alabama, North Carolina, and Florida 1830s. Nonetheless, not many native people continued to live in the Southeast by the end of the decade. Native Americans were feared and despised by white settlers, especially those living on the western…
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The Trail of Tears, a tragic event in American history, proves the consequences of government forced relocation and oppression have affected over 100,000 Native Americans. It not only resulted in the loss of lives but also the loss of land, culture, along with freedom. European exploration and colonization were based on the quest for God, gold, as well as glory (Motivations for,n.d.). After the Crusades, Europeans viewed colonization for trading purposes but even for religious reasons. Trade routes…
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pressured the Delaware, Shawnee, and Kickapoo tribes to move across the Mississippi. The 1830 Indian Removal Act forced Indians into the west. Sadly moving so many miles brought death and devastation for many Indians, an the journey was called the Trail of Tears by Indians. A few years later in 1854 the Kansas- Nebraska Act began the second Indian removal. And even more trouble came just five years later when Texas threatened…
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troops under General Winfield Scott were to forcibly gather up Cherokee people into relocation camps and remove them overland to the Reservation west of the Mississippi, what is now called Trail of Tears. Some of the 4,000 Cherokees who were forcibly removed from their land died in camps or along the Trail of Tears. Later on, a new treaty stated that the Cherokee Nation was one nation with a bunch of lands now occupied by the Cherokee nation. Took place in Trans-Mississippi and Western Theaters. Union…
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and gathering. They respect and are attached to their lands and nature greatly and believe that all of the natural world is alive and in unity with humans. There are more than 5,000 indigenous tribes in the world but the groups affected in the trail of tears were Cherokee, Choctaw, Chickasaw, Creek, and Seminole, with Cherokee being the most affected. Indigenous people are a crucial part of…
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The Cherokees experiences on the Trail of Tears were acknowledged at Cadron Settlement Park, but the intensity of their hardships was neglected. The Indian Removal Act of 1830 began the deterioration of living conditions for American Indians as they were forced out of their traditional homeland by the United States government. The Cherokee, Chickasaw, Creek, Choctaw, and Seminole tribes passed through what is now Cadron Settlement Park by land and water. My perception of the Cherokees battles against…
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Trail of Tears Response Essay. The Trail of Tears was several forced movements of Indian groups in the United States after the Indian Removal Act. The nations that were removed include members of the Cherokee, Seminole, Chickasaw, and Choctaw nations, from their homes in the southeastern U.S. to a places west of the Mississippi River that was decided to be claimed as Indian land. Native Americans who chose to join in with the American’s culture were allowed to stay and become citizens of the U…
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