Cherokee tribe

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    The Traditional Belief System- Lifestyle Cherokee Indians are a small portion of Native Americans, however their culture is slowly declining as time goes on. There are many Cherokee ancestry all around the world, including myself, but there are only around 288,500 federally recognized citizens that still belong to a Cherokee tribe. As this culture can seem difficult to understand from its complexity, it is actually quite simple. There are still many elements used today that are from the…

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    century and often viewed as being the future of the American democracy. As a president, he was not a friend of the Native American population to say the least. This was no surprise considering the numerous campaigns he had led against many of the Indian tribes along the Southern borders as a major general. In his rise to presidency, inequality was very much present, especially among the Native American people. Jacksons view of the Indians was based solely on their land. This was a time where…

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    Cherokee Removal For this assignment, our group got the opportunity to choose the topic of the Native Americans. The first thing that came to mind was to do my topic on the Cherokee Removal. The Cherokee Removal, part of the trail of tears, occurred in 1838. The U.S. military and various state militias forced some 15,000 Cherokees from their homes in Alabama, Georgia, North Carolina, and Tennessee and moved them west to Indian Territory. The removal of the Cherokee Nation fulfilled federal and…

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    family, so he ran away from home. Afterwards a few days later, he decided to join the Cherokee tribe. "He sojourned for three years with the band of Chief Oolooteka, who adopted him and gave him the Indian name Colonneh, or the Raven." (www.tshaonline.org). The relationship was so great with the Cherokee tribe that Houston respected Oolooteka as if he were his real father. Time passed and Houston had to leave the tribe to follow his dreams and be someone important in the history of the United…

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    The year was 1838; approximately 16,000 Cherokees were forced off of their tribal lands by the United States Government, on a march later known to the Indians as the Trail of 4,000 Tears known to us as the Trail of Tears. They were forced to leave their homes and everything they held dear to their hearts. This treatment was unfair to the Natives after everything they helped us with. The removal of Native Americans from their lands by the Indian Removal Act of 1830 violated their political, legal…

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    The Trail of Tears begins a short time before the Revolutionary War, roughly 1771, with the birth of a Cherokee names Ridge. Ridge, who was one-quarter Scot, and his family settled in northwest Georgia with several other mixed-blood Cherokees. This territory is where the Cherokee Nation would eventually be centered around. When Ridge reached manhood, around the age of sixteen, he became a warrior. Doublehead, a corrupt Indian chief, taught and instructed Ridge to be a warrior and then took him…

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    Cherokee Patriarchy

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    There was varied response to white encroachment. John Ross mixed blood convinced the Cherokee to adopt the strategy of accommodation which he felt would increase the chance of survival. The Creek, Seminole, and Shawnee forcibly resisted. The Cherokee society shifted from traditional to more agrarian. Traditional men hunted while women engaged in farming. Their traditional matrilineal kinship system eroded where a person belonged to his or her mother’s clan. The U.S. system or patriarchy was…

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    the Myth of the Vanishing Indian can demonstrated with the Cherokee removal…

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    The Westward Expansion

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    Jefferson and Andrew Jackson were able to expand westward, but at the expense of several Native American tribes. John O’ Sullivan was able to convey the idea that the US was meant to expand across the entire continent of North America. To Jefferson, westward expansion was key to the nation’s…

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    The Cherokee Removal

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    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,…

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