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A Brief History of The Trail of Tears

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Title: The Trail Where They Cried Author: Smith College Last modified by: Roxy Schneider Created Date: 11/26/2001 3:26:30 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: A Brief History of The Trail of Tears


1

A Brief History of The Trail of Tears
  • By Nora
  • Group T-6
  • December 9, 2001

2
One Artists
Interpretation
Trail of Tears
of The
3
How It Began
  • Before our story really starts, the Cherokee
    Indians of Georgia were living fairly peacefully
    in their ancestral homeland. They farmed the
    fertile land, and hunted. They had their own
    constitution, religion, and government. Mostly,
    they didnt bother the white people nearby. One
    chief even saved the life of the President in a
    battle.

4
How It Began
  • All this was soon to change, though. When gold
    was found on Cherokee land, the whites wanted out
    with the Native Americans so they could farm the
    rich land and dig for gold. The Cherokee, who
    had seen other tribes moved and knew how terrible
    the journey would be, resisted. When the
    government brought the matter to the Supreme
    Court, it ruled in favor of the Cherokee, saying
    they could only begin an Indian Removal Act if
    the Indians who they wanted to move signed a new
    treaty, agreeing to the plan.

5
How It Began
  • Most of the Cherokee didnt want to move, and
    John Ross (a Cherokee leader) thought they were
    safe. However, three rebellious tribe members
    (led by John Ridge) signed the proclamation.
    Ross and his followers found out, and the signers
    were killed. By that time, though, it was too
    late. The Indian Removal Act was in action,
    and no one could stop it.

6
The Trip
  • In 1838, General Winfield Scott and the US Army
    came to move the Cherokee. They would walk from
    their home, and the home of their ancestors
    before them, all the way to a reservation in
    Arkansas. Georgia to Arkansas? Thats a long
    walk! The Cherokee knew from the walks of others
    that it was to be more than just long.

7
The Trip
  • Naturally, many Cherokee ran away, unwilling to
    walk with their white enemies. Some of those who
    tried to escape where caught. Others made it to
    freedom. Those who did not escape had to travel.

8
The Trip
  • First about 5,000 Cherokee went in boats. It
    was summer and the hot sun killed many. John
    Ross begged for a winter walk, thinking it would
    be better.

9
The Trip
  • Unfortunately, winter was even worse then
    summer. Snow fell and the wind whistled. Who
    cared? They still had to walk, so they did.
    They walked all day and slept in the open all
    night.

10
The Trip
  • Many got sick on the long walk. If they
    couldnt keep up, they were left to die. The
    elders, with their immense knowledge, were no
    longer fit for such a walk. Who cared if they
    didnt reach the end? The soldiers didnt.
    Sometimes the men in army colors would even shoot
    a Cherokee who was slowing them down. Almost all
    of the 17,000 Cherokee either walked or traveled
    by boat. Roughly 4,000 died from horrible
    conditions, illness, starvation, threats caused
    by nature, and the soldiers, who didnt care.

11
The Trail of Tears
  • This horrific event in Americas history, so
    hidden among the perils and triumphs of our white
    ancestors, is with us today. The trail that so
    many thousands of feet walked over is still
    there, even if we cannot see it, and there are
    still 4,000 bodies buried by the side of that
    road. This long and terrible walk was known by
    those who experienced it as The Trail Where They
    Cried. This terrible event is more commonly
    known as The Trail Of Tears.

12
The Trail of Tears
  • The symbol of the trail is the Cherokee Rose, now
    also the official state flower of Georgia. This
    slide is here to remind us of a painful mark in
    our history, which we should never forget.

The Cherokee Rose
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