The trail of tears was a tretrous journey that the native Americans took. Because the Americans would promise land, then take it back. First off it was approximately one thousand miles. The five different tribes were the Cherokee, Choctaw, Seminole, and finally the Creek. They traveled from deep in the south to present day Oklahoma. The Americans made the Choctaw tribe leave first in 1831, then the Seminoles in 1832, then the Creek in 1834, after that the Chickasaw in 1837 the last tribe that got pushed out was the Cherokee in 1838. More than 4,000 Indians had to go through the horrible feeling of many tribe members dying around them. From diseases that the British brought from England. Some of those diseases were smallpox, malaria, measles,
Written by Steve Inskeep detailing the lives of President Andrew Jackson and Cherokee Chief John Ross during 1812 to 1835. Jacksonland describes President Andrew’s desire to remove five indian tribes from their traditional homeland and move them to the far west. They were the initial targets of the Indian Removal Act of 1830 and eventually leading to the Trail of Tears. The book opens with a particular set of maps showing how the land was divided in the era of the story.
However, President Jackson and his government more than often ignored the letter of the law and forced Native Americans to vacate lands they had lived on for several generations. In the winter of 1831, under threat of invasion by the U.S. Army, the Choctaw became the first nation to be expelled from its land completely. They made the journey to Indian Territory on foot, without any food or supplies, nor help from the government. Thousands of Indians died along the way. By 1838, an estimated 2,000 Cherokees had left their Georgia homeland for Indian Territory and 7,000 soldiers were sent to expedite the removal process.
In 1830, Jackson signed the Indian Removal Act, which gave the federal government the power to exchange Native-held land. As the Indian- removal process continued, the federal government drove the Creeks out from their land for the last time: out of 15,000 Creeks 3,500 of them did not survive in 1836. By 1838, about 2,000 Cherokee Indians had left their Georgia homeland for the Indian Territory. General Winfield Scott and 7,000 of his troops marched the Cherokees more than 1,200 miles to Indian Territory. 5,000 Cherokees died from whooping cough, cholera, typhus, starvation, and
Lindsey Hernandez Johnson U.S. Honors 28 September 2015 The Indian Removal Act & Trail of Tears Picture this; someone is in their home with their family, they are the first people to ever settle in this land, Native American, with their own language, religion and one day white people come. The white people are treated with kindness and welcome, not out of dignity but out of fear. There is peace.
15,000 Native Americans faced hardships like hunger and disease as they were forced to walk thousands of miles to designated Indian territory across the Mississippi River. The trail of tears is believed
President Jackson had ordered the Indians to move westward beyond the Mississippi River. More than 15,000 members of the Cherokee tribe were forced from their homes. The relocation became known as the “Trail of Tears” because of the great hardship they faced. I think in that time line that were is a lot of war and fighting I would not like to live back then because there is a lot of that stuff
They marched the Indians to a fort that was built at New Echota. After 3 long days, the Indians were marched to Ross’s Landing still on foot, including the little children. (Document 6). This march was known as the Trail of Tears. Jackson marched 20,000 Natives and more than 5,000 of them died in the process.
The Trail to Freedom The Underground Railroad was a series of safe houses were escaping slaves would hide and stay until they were able to move from slave to non-slave states. The Underground Railroad wasn’t actually underground. Due to the large amount of secrecy, it was called underground because it was hidden in plain sight. A series of conductors would meet slaves and help them cross rivers, streams, and lakes.
government had had enough of these protests against the Removal Act, so they began to enforce it. The Choctaw were the first to travel on foot towards Indian Country without food, supplies or their promised help from the government, and had been threatened by the U.S. The Creek Indians were threatened by the U.S. and made their long perilous journey over the border in 1836, but only 3,500 of 15,000 survived. This trail was quickly referenced as the “Trail where they cried”, or Trail of Tears. Only 2,000 Cherokee had left their home by 1838, so President Van Buren sent the army was sent to round up Natives to prison camps. Soldiers forced the Cherokee from their homes, but did not fight back under their chief’s orders.
Trail of Tears Have you ever been taken from home? , where you had laughter,sadness good times and then these people that you have heard of,These people who have lighter skin then you come and take you away. That's how the 5 tribes felt the Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Creek last but not least the Seminole. In this piece you will learn Who caused it,Why it happen.
The Trail of Tears was a cold hearted crime committed against innocent people in order to obtain the riches of the land the Native Americans had settled upon. The Native American’s refusal to leave resulted in the death of around 4,000 Cherokee people due to hunger, disease and long exposure to the cold. The Trail of Tears was the greatest crime against the indigenous people. The Trail of Tears began when President Andrew Jackson authorized the removal of the Indian removal act of 1830.
One factor that led to the removal of the Indians at the Trail of Tears was white settlers who were influenced and driven by the belief in Manifest Density to expand all the way to the Pacific Ocean(westward), but it was complicated by the discovery of gold on the Indian lands which convinced many other settlers to move into California and get Indians
The trail of Tears was an unethical decision implemented by the government of the United State. The President Jackson used force to push the native American out of their lands. According to www.ushistory.gov, << Over 20,000 Cherokees were forced to march westward along the Trail of Tears. About a quarter of them died along the way>>.
“If I was not innocent… then they were not innocent. Could this mix of motivation also affect the stories they tell? The cities they built? The country they claimed as given to them by God?” (Coates 30 ).
While making this gruesome travel more than 4,000 Indians died from disease, starvation and treacherous conditions. This travel became known as the “trails of tears”. These Native Americans were not how white settlement described them. Many of the tribes adopted Euro-american practices and created their own communities with schools and churches, even developed their own languages and created bilingual newspapers.