Trail of Tears - Pi Beta Phi Elementary School
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Transcript Trail of Tears - Pi Beta Phi Elementary School
Trail of Tears
Grade 4
Social Studies Online
Blueprint Skill: Era 4 Expansion and Reform
(1801-1861)
Read and interpret a passage about the
Trail of Tears.
Cherokee culture…
Before contact, Cherokee culture had
developed and thrived for almost 1,000
years in the southeastern United States-the lower Appalachian states of
Georgia, Tennessee, North and South
Carolina, and parts of Kentucky and
Alabama.
Background information
Since first contact with European
explorers in the 1500s, the Cherokee
Nation had been recognized as one of
the most progressive among American
Indian tribes.
Cherokee life until 1710…
Life of the traditional
Cherokee remained
unchanged as late
as 1710, which is
marked as the
beginning of
Cherokee trade with
the whites.
Frontier contact…
The period of frontier contact from
1540-1786, was marked by white
expansion and the cession of Cherokee
lands to the colonies in exchange for
trade goods
Cherokee interaction…
After contact, the Cherokees acquired
many aspects of the white neighbors
with whom many had intermarried.
Soon they had shaped a government
and a society that matched the most
"civilized" of the time.
Sequoyah
Cherokee culture
continued to flourish
with the invention of
the Cherokee
alphabet by
Sequoyah in 1821.
Cherokee migration…
Migration from the original Cherokee
Nation began in the early 1800s as
Cherokees wary of white encroachment
moved west
A government decision…
The white communities turned on their
Indian neighbors and the U.S.
Government decided it was time for the
Cherokees to leave behind their farms,
their land and their homes
Indian Removal Act
In 1830 the Congress of the United
States passed the "Indian Removal Act."
Although many Americans were against
the act, most notably Tennessee
Congressman Davy Crockett, it passed
anyway.
The bill became law
President Jackson quickly signed the bill
into law. The Cherokees attempted to
fight removal legally by challenging the
removal laws in the Supreme Court and
by establishing an independent
Cherokee Nation.
Court ruling…
In 1832, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled
in favor of the Cherokee on the issue in
Worcester v. Georgia. In this case Chief
Justice John Marshall ruled that the
Cherokee Nation was sovereign, making
the removal laws invalid. The Cherokee
would have to agree to removal in a
treaty. The treaty then would have to
be ratified by the Senate.
A divided nation…
By 1835 the Cherokee were divided and
despondent. Most supported Principal
Chief John Ross, who fought the
encroachment of whites starting with
the 1832 land lottery.
The will of a minority
However, a minority (less than 500 out
of 17,000 Cherokee in North Georgia)
followed Major Ridge, his son John, and
Elias Boudinot, who advocated removal.
Removing the Cherokees…
The Treaty of New Echota, signed by
Ridge and members of the Treaty Party
in 1835, gave Jackson the legal
document he needed to remove the
First Americans.
Ratification of the treaty…
Ratification of the treaty by the United
States Senate sealed the fate of the
Cherokee. Among the few who spoke
out against the ratification were Daniel
Webster and Henry Clay, but it passed
by a single vote.
The removal of Indians began…
In 1838 the United States began the
removal to Oklahoma, fulfilling a
promise the government made to
Georgia in 1802.
General Wool protested the
move….
Ordered to move on the Cherokee,
General John Wool resigned his
command in protest, delaying the
action.
The invasion of the Cherokee
nation….
His replacement, General Winfield Scott,
arrived at New Echota on May 17, 1838
with 7000 men. Early that summer
General Scott and the United States
Army began the invasion of the
Cherokee Nation.
Marching to Oklahoma….
In one of the saddest episodes of our
brief history, men, women, and children
were taken from their land, herded into
makeshift forts with minimal facilities
and food, then forced to march a
thousand miles.
Loss of life
Under the generally indifferent army
commanders, human losses for the first
groups of Cherokee removed were
extremely high.
Reorganization of Cherokees into
smaller groups
John Ross made an urgent appeal to
Scott, requesting that the general let his
people lead the tribe west. General
Scott agreed. Ross organized the
Cherokee into smaller groups and let
them move separately through the
wilderness so they could forage for
food.
Arriving in Oklahoma
Although the parties under Ross left in
early fall and arrived in Oklahoma
during the brutal winter of 1838-39, he
significantly reduced the loss of life
among his people. About 4000
Cherokee died as a result of the
removal.
The Trail Where They Cried
The route they traversed and the
journey itself became known as "The
Trail of Tears" or, as a direct translation
from Cherokee, "The Trail Where They
Cried" ("Nunna daul Tsuny").
Map of the Trail of Tears
April 1839
Cherokees build houses, clear land,
plant and begin to rebuild their
nation.
Eastern Band of Cherokee
Indians
Those who were able to hide in the
mountains of North Carolina or who had
agreed to exchange Cherokee citizenship for
U.S. citizenship later emerged as the Eastern
Band of Cherokee Indians of Cherokee, N.C.
The descendants of the survivors of the Trail
of Tears comprise today's Cherokee Nation
with membership of more than 165,000.
Resources
The Trail of Tears
Cherokee Messenger