Chickasaw

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    Since the beginning of American history power relations have played a very important aspect within the country’s development. From initial English settler colonialism spanning towards the American Revolution, a so called “multi-perspectival” approach must be taken when dealing with the complicated and intertwining stories each group of people represents. Various African Americans, Native Americans, and European Americans all conflicted, and aided, each other within the ebb and flow these power…

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    The American Revolution (1775-1783) is often regarded as one of the most significant events to take place in United States history, it marked the official dissociation between Great Britain and America. Though, the importance of this event does not lay in the pride mustered by winning an unlikely victory, or in the ingenious wartime strategies and efforts put forward by the clearly inferior American militia, but in the impact it had on post-Revolution American society. Following the American…

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    to an agreement, in blunt terms, these tribes were being forcefully removed or they faced certain murder. Many tribal leaders understood the disgusting reality and they signed away their land. Between 1831 and 1837, Choctaws, Seminoles, Creeks, Chickasaws, and most Cherokees traveled westward to their new homes in the Oklahoma territories. Some Cherokee tribes refused to relocate, and they were met with federal troops, who took them on a Trail of Tears. The Trail of Tears had 15,000 Indians and…

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    The Cherokee tribe is a tribe that originated in southwest Virginia, western North Carolina and South Carolina, north Georgia, east Tennessee, and northeast Alabama, and claiming even to the Ohio River. The cherokee is a very large tribe that stretched over a vast area. The Cherokee tribe had many sub tribes. The sub tribes often spoke different languages. The Cherokee language originated from the Iroquoian language. Cherokee is a polysynthetic language. A polysynthetic language means that one…

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    The Choctaw and Chickasaw tribes gave up their lands without resistance because they did not have any powerful military force. Three Native American groups refused to relocate. One group was the Seminole. This caused the Second Seminole War which later caused the death of…

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    Cultural Genocide: Destroying a Way of Life In her novel, Mean Spirit, Linda Hogan depicts violence against Osage people during the oil boom in Oklahoma in the early 1920s. Greed of the EuroAmerican system creates a crisis in cultural identity for those Osage who have tried to live among the white people. Ways in which the white characters corrupt the world of the Osage at that time include degrading their native beliefs in the things they hold sacred, the damaging relationships among…

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    Europeans have had an impact on many peoples’ life and culture. This was no different when the Europeans first came to America and encountered the natives. When the English and the Puritans first arrived, the Native Americans handled them in different ways. Some welcomed them with open arms, while others approached them with caution.; however, despite handling the Europeans differently, the natives were still impacted by them all the same. The Native Americans’ culture was impacted by…

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    Native Americans, as we know, lived on American soil long before the Europeans landed on it. America was their home for centuries but once the Europeans came to settle, all of that changed. The Native Americans, including the Cherokee, Choctaw, Chickasaw, Creek, Seminole, and many more, were forced to move west to make more room for the settlers. The settlers also wanted the land to themselves so they could make a profit off of it. Many of the Native Americans suffered from starvation and…

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    In 1838 The Trail of Tears was an exodus that the United States government enforced for many Native American tribes including the Cherokees, Seminoles, Chickasaws, Choctaws, and the Creeks to migrate to reservations west of the Mississippi River to an area in present-day Oklahoma.. American Indians’ homelands were destroyed and taken from them. Their cultures were also dramatically altered or even destroyed. The Creeks lost 22 million acres of land in southern Georgia and Alabama. A man…

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    Dbq Indian Removal

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    initiated and enacted by Andrew Jackson. Standing in the way of white settlers and their path to greater prosperity were the sizable number of Native Americans. The so-called Five Civilized Tribes, which included the Cherokees, Choctaws, Creeks, Chickasaws, and Seminoles occupied the land, especially in the South, which threatened the expansion of the land-hungry Americans. President Andrew Jackson promised to resolve this issue with the Indian Removal Act, by the volunteer exchange of Indian…

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