Questions from Problem One: Does Virginia have a militia? Yes, Virginia does have a militia. The U.S. National Archives and Records Administration’s official website details the establishment of a militia in Article 1 Section 13 of Virginia’s Bill of Rights, located within the Virginia Constitution: That a well-regulated militia, composed of the body of the people, trained to arms, is the proper; that standing armies, in time of peace, should be avoided as dangerous to liberty; and that in all cases the military should be under strict subordination to, and governed by, the civil power. More importantly, Liberty University Law Review’s Stephen P. Halbrook points out that in the year 1971, the people of Virginia revised their Constitution…
Perdue and Green’s “The Cherokee Removal, A Brief History with Documents” is an introduction to the social and political period surrounding the removal of Cherokee Indians. The authors’ inclusion of many documents, shares with readers, the Indian voices as well as key political figures’ position on sovereign governance. This complex period is successfully outlined by Perdue and Green, with a chronological account of the Indians’ first encounter with Europeans through the inevitable journey, “Trail of Tears”.…
• As a class we will be completing timelines of both the Algonquin and Iroquois tribes, today we will focus only on the Algonquin’s. • I have pictures that represent specific times in the Algonquin history. These pictures will be placed on timeline in their correct chronological order. I will then ask the students to write about what they think is happening in a photo of their choice that is one the timeline. After they are done with their writing, they can then share with the person sitting next to them what they are thinking.…
Iroquois Confederacy The Iroquois Confederacy is made up of six tribes Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga, Seneca and Tuscarora. Originally the Tuscarora's were not a part of the Iroquois Confederacy. Deganawida is said to have went to all five original tribes along with Chief Hiawatha of the Mohawks and made peace between those tribes. After that being done the clan mothers selected fifty chiefs who made up the council. Clan Mothers had a big part in the tribes.…
The Constitution of the Iroquois expressed as well as described a variety rituals they performed that were part of the confederation. They performed these rituals because they helped maintain their union together. Their confederation benefitted from these rituals because they helped maintain them united as well as out of trouble. It also created a safe environment for them to express freely themselves without judgement or ny kind of persecution. Also the point for these rituals was to remind them of the confederation they were from and that they were suppose to be submitted to their confederation.…
Abraham was born in Georgia in 1787 and later lived in Pensacola, Florida, where he worked as a domestic servant for Doctor Sierra, a Spanish physician. Abraham joined the British army during the War of 1812 because the British commanders promised freedom to slaves who joined them in fighting the Americans. Shortly thereafter, during the period that Florida was under nominal Spanish rule, the Americans attacked. Abraham fled from General Andrew Jackson’s military advances and helped build the Negro Fort (1816) on the Apalachicola River. The Fort became a haven for African Americans who had escaped slavery from neighboring Southern States.…
The Cherokee Nation and the Trail of Tears During the spring semester of 2016, I was given the opportunity to read a very insightful book called, The Cherokee Nation and the Trail of Tears, by Theda Purdue and Micheal D. Green. The book covers the events leading up to, during, and directly after the Trail of Tears. The Trail of Tears was the mass migration of Native Americans from their motherland in the eastern shores of the United States, to the territories of the southwestern United States. Throughout the early 19th Century, there were many conflicts between the government and Native Americans; although none were more racially and economically motivated than that of the state of Georgia and it’s citizens. “We believe the present plan…
4. The Native Americans formed alliances with European nations in an attempt to block invasions from colonists onto their land and to get support from trading. A prime example of this is from the time of the French and Indian War when a majority of native tribes in the northern region were involved in the fur trade with the French and allied with them against the British although a few of tribes allied with the British to prove their loyalty to treaties and protect their land. An example of one of the British and Indian alliances is the Covenant Chain which was an alliance between the Iroquois tribes and the British that served as a model for other native tribes. In most situations, the Native Americans kept up their end of the agreement between…
If asked, most people would point to the Revolutionary war as the war that made America. After all, it was when America declared independence from England and began to stand as its own nation, when all those lofty ideals of equality and liberty flourished and began to shape the modern American identity. But Fred Anderson makes a very different argument; that it was in fact the French and Indian war that would ultimately make the nation into what it is today by radically altering the political landscape in North America, creating the climate for those ideas to take form in the first place and, more importantly, by stripping the native populations of North America of power and allies, leaving them helpless against an encroaching white population. What begun as a power struggle between three major players – British, French, and Iroquois – in North America for control of…
The First Seminole War happened in the years of 1817 to 1818 between the United States and the Seminoles of Florida. The first Seminole War was a punitive journey led by Andrew Jackson into the La Florida, which was a Spanish colony in 1818. Many are under the impression that the United States were responsible for the cause of the war and everything that happened in the war, when in fact both sides were responsible for the war, and both were equally to blame for the consequences of the war. The Seminoles were actually the Creeks who had escaped from being slaves in the Northern colonies. They spoke the Mikasuki language and consisted of several different Indian tribes.…
Choctaw Culture Assignment Kylee Carpenter, Danyelle Gray, Amy Russell and Christopher Willis Carl Albert State College December 3, 2015 Before the arrival of European ships, settlers and soldiers in the sixteenth century, the Choctaws flourished in southeastern North America, mainly in Mississippi, Tennessee and Alabama. They were an ancient people who farmed, crafted, traded with neighbors near and far and built great ceremonial centers. The forces that brought together Native Americans and Europeans vary greatly, from land expeditions and missionary excursions to military conquests (Haag & Willis, 2001). After much resistance to the European way of life many Choctaws were relocated to present-day Oklahoma.…
The Southeastern Native Americans jobs and roles. Men did hard labor and women stayed home and cooked. The women watched kids while men cut trees and hunted. The men were the most important part of the southeastern tribes because they got the supplies and ruled over the tribe. The Southeastern Native Americans had men run the tribe also thought women couldn’t run the tribe.…
Did you know that the indians had massacred men, women, and children during 1812? The cherokee Indians were given the option to move to the indian territory in Louisiana. So the americans can have the georgia state and that they didn’t like the fact that the indians had killed people. So the americans wanted them to move to an indian territory so they wouldn’t have to kill the americans. They were also given money and a large land but if they didn’t move then they would have to follow the laws of Georgia.…
Topic and Research Question Topic: For my historical event analysis, I have chosen to focus on The Cherokee "Trail of Tears" Research Question: How the Indian Removal Act of 1830 affected the Cherokee? Preliminary Writing Plan Introduction The historical analysis focuses on the topic is “The Cherokee Trail of Tears”; the topic is about a historical event that caused suffering and death of one of the tribes that are native in America. The Cherokee are among the Creeks, the Chickasaw, the Seminoles and the Choctaw who constituted the native tribes that assimilated and coped with the white settlers (United States Department of State, 2017).…
Two Worlds Become One How does the Iroquois Creation story show similarities and differences from the Christian Creation story? In “The Iroquois Creation Story” by David Cusick, connections can be made with the Christian Creation story.…