The Cherokee Indians are of Iroquoian descent and originally from the Great Lakes region of the country. They were one of the largest of five Native American tribes who settled in the American Southeast portion of the country in the areas that we today call Alabama, Kentucky, Georgia, Tennessee, South Carolina, North Carolina, West Virginia, and Virginia. The Cherokees believed that the earth belonged to no one readily shared the land they called home and taught the early settlers how to hunt, fish, and farm in their new environment. They introduced them to crops such as corn, squash, and potatoes; and taught them how to use herbal medicines for illnesses. Easily adapting to the colonist’s European culture early the Cherokee replaced their traditionally made products with European made pots and knives, guns, and gunpowder. …show more content…
Guns were especially important. Indians used guns to defend themselves against other armed tribes. This trade created problems. As the Indians expanded their hunting grounds to find more deer for the colonists, would sometimes trespass on settlers’ farms or to bump into other tribes. They also began depleting the game animals that were native to the area. As more and more European settlers moved into Cherokee, land conflicts between the Cherokees and the whites began to arise. In an effort to rid themselves of the settlers, many Cherokee sided with the British during the American
When the English arrived in Massachusetts in the 1700’s colonists were excited to see acres upon acres of open land. They saw great opportunity in this land, as they would be the first to farm and cultivate it. They also came upon Native Americans. These Indians, having different relationships with animals than the English, did not believe in owning livestock. When the colonists came, they tired to implement their values of owning livestock and transform New England into a civilized colony.
Hundreds of Cherokees were moved from their land by white people for selfish reasons. The Cherokee lived in northern Georgia. The Cherokee were not citizens of the American so they couldn't vote. The didn't have any rights. They had a lot of land and access to the rivers and lakes.
The settlers began a trade with the indians, and it is said that former relations were going well between the two until the settlers decided that they needed to head inland further. This led to the setllers wanting to set up colonies and ultimatly the impriosnment of indians. This
The Native Americans also desired goods they could not produce (guns, alcohol, and blankets). This brought about rapid change which destroyed the culture of the natives. Alcohol disrupted daily life for the natives and blankets were carriers for
However, they faced many hardships such as, treaties going unrecognized and attacks from the Cherokee. When the National Government made a treaty with the Cherokee on where boundaries lied; Settlers were outraged, because some of the lands had already been inhabited by the Settlers. Wars broke out between the Settlers and the Cherokee. Though Franklin could
Throughout the 16th to 17th century, European powers were scrambling to find opportunities in the New World. Three prominent European countries; the British, French, and Spanish, were exploring the Americas for their own personal agendas. They wanted to find ways to expand their empires and also to build their respective economies. However, they ran into the Native American populations that had settled in these “new lands.” As expected, conflict between the two groups emerged.
The cherokee (chair-uh-kee) tribe was a tribe located in the southeastern part of the United States in states like Georgia, North and South Carolina, Virginia, Kentucky, and Tennessee. Descendants now mostly live in Oklahoma. Many of the descendants now live in Oklahoma because of the Trail of tears which was the removal of Native americans by forcing them to Indian reservation, and if the tribes didn’t go by will the american army would force them.
The Cherokee are a Native American tribe that originated in the Southeastern portion of the United States. This area includes the states of North and South Carolina, as well as Georgia. Following the signing of the Indian Removal Act by Congress in 1830, some twenty-thousand Cherokee were forcibly removed from their lands and forced to march to Oklahoma along the infamous Trail of Tears. Despite the government’s efforts, some Cherokee managed to avoid this horrific fate and create hidden settlements in portions of western North Carolina and northern Georgia. The descendants of these settlers later became the Eastern Band of Cherokee.
The Native Americans were upset by the number of colonists that were surging into their territories and endangering the wildlife population. The resolution of these issues was usually referred back to England. England, however, proved unable to deal with these issues.
The Cherokees in Georgia owned land that they had always owned. The Cherokees were a civilized tribe and tried to do what the government asked when the request was reasonable. Then, gold was discovered on Cherokee land, and Georgian speculators asked the Cherokees to sell their land. Cherokees refused to sell their land because of tribal stuff.
This move destroyed more than ten thousand natives and drastically changed the Cherokee way of life. This conflict, eventually known as the Trail of Tears, was caused by the white settlers wants and needs that differed from what the Native Americans wanted. There were numerous causes, goals, and steps taken on each side of this dilemma to get what each group wanted, but there was never a peaceful agreement made between the white settlers and the Cherokee Nation. As the United States started to expand with more people, they needed more land.
Cherokee trade with the English colonies of Georgia and South Carolina had increased, the in the 1740s, the Cherokee tribes developed a hunting and farming lifestyle. In 1775, one Cherokee Nation was described as having one hundred houses. Each house had a garden, orchard, hothouse, and hog
But, if they were to stay they would have to become conformed to the ways of the American people as well as the ways of the American government. If the Cherokee move to Indian Territory, they would be able to live under their own government and not under the American government. Also, the deal that the U.S made with them was too good to give up. Lastly, by moving they would 100% end the chance of any possible civil war between their people and the Georgians, who want their land so bad, that they would kill for it. Therefore, the Cherokee SHOULD be removed, and placed into lands further west.
The development of agriculture and the rise of industrialization generated new cultures and innovations in the new world. Native people in early America developed cultural distinct , men were in charge of the fishing, hunting, jobs that were more exposed to violence, and the women stayed closed to the village, farming, and child bearing. The way of life possessed by natives Americans did not compel them to conquer and transform new land. As opposed to European colonizers, Native Americans subscribed to a more “animistic” understanding of nature. In which they believed that plants and animals are not commodities, they are something to be respected rather than used.
Ranging from the south Alleghenies mountain range all the way down to the south of Georgia and far west of Alabama, lived the Cherokee Indians. They were a powerful detached tribe of the Iroquoian family and were commonly called Tsaragi which translates into "cave people. " This tribe was very prominent in what is now called the U.S, but over time has been split up or run out of their land because of social or political encounters with the new settlers from Europe. Despite the dispersion or the split amongst this tribe, they still obtained their core religious beliefs, practices and ceremonies. Their detailed belief system, fundamental beliefs, significant meanings, and their connection to song and dance make up their religious system.