The U.S government at first wanted to establish a treaty
The U.S government at first wanted to establish a treaty
Hedges and Sacco begin the book by discussing Whiteclay, a small incorporated village in Nebraska. The clients that come to Whiteclay primarily for alcohol are Native Americans from Pine Ridge, a reservation that is located in South Dakota. Hedges and Sacco were able to direct my attention into the lives of those in the Pine Ridge reservation by describing the problems with alcoholism and poverty that they face. Using the example of Long Wolf, they really gave me a feel for the hardships that Native Americans faced among their families. For Verlyn Long Wolf, her childhood experiences were dictated by physical, verbal, and sexual abuse. It upsets me that a girl has to go through such hardships at a young age. It was really striking that she was married and divorced around seven times and that all of them were abusive, except for one. The authors linked the vivid descriptions of rape and abuse back to the tragic history of white conquest. I think what really stood out to me about the Native Americans was when Hedges and Sacco talked about the Smithsonian museum…
While watching "Trail of Tears" I noticed the hardship of wanting to stay in the same location from John Ross break apart due to other political needs which lead to relocation of the Cherokee tribe. With the horrific pathways of muddy terrains and snowy areas during the process of relocating many of the Native Americans died day after day. However they had no choice since it was either to stay at their original homes but disband from the tribe or to contiue in the tribe but to face the predicaments their fellow tribe members went threw. In the reading a statement caught my eye, " American Indians died by the thousands from measles, influenza, smallpox, cholera, tuberclosis, and a variety of other infectious diseases." ( Wax,1971, p 123) By…
1. The Cherokee endured a lot on the trail of tears. They had to suffer from fatigue and had to struggle with giving up their land. They also had to deal with disease and losing their love ones. Finally they also had to deal with the cold and freezing. In conclusion, the Cherokee endured a lot on the trail of tears.…
Author John Ehle has written a book that follows the struggles of the early Cherokee people that were torn between the ways of their ancestors and the new régimes that some of their people want to follow. The Cherokee people were confused with how to adapt to their surroundings and to claim their own rights that the current government was denying to them. In the Trail of Tears, Ehle uses many different people and the historic accounts of their actions to tell the story of tragic and unfair deals made with the Cherokee people by the United States. One of the main historical figures Mr. Ehle centers upon is Major Ridge. He tells of Major Ridge's ideas and hopes that would lead his people to prosperity. The United States government is closely analyzed; specifically pertaining to how the government neglected to help the Cherokee people become more efficient for themselves and not protecting them from other land greedy states.…
“On their march west, 6,000 Cherokee people died of cold, hunger and disease.” (Burnett) This statement is accurate because it states that the Cherokees were forced to get out of the land roughly because they didn’t leave at the given period of time. When they were removed they didn’t have places to go so they traveled west and around that time it was really cold since it was around December. This is the outside evidence that proves that it’s accurate, “Then began the march known as the Trail of Tears, in which 4,000 Cherokee people died of cold, hunger, and disease on their way to the western lands.” (Nicholson 56)…
The Trail of Tears was caused by the Indian Removal Act of 1830. The enforcement of this act was possible through the use of military forces. “The soldiers first erected internment camps and then rounded up the Cherokees. ‘Families at dinner were startled...and rose up to be driven with blows and oaths along the weary miles of trail that led to the stockade’”(Takaki 76). The Cherokees were gathered and forced to go on the trail. They were dragged out of their homes without notice and put on these trails unprepared, where they would face severe conditions of weather, sickness, etc.…
There is an incredible array of different historical writings and interpretations of slavery in America in the Antebellum period. One could be mistaken into thinking that there is nothing left to research and debate. Yet, what is rarely mentioned in the annals of American history are the profound effects slavery has had on the Native American nations. Hoping to illuminate this often overlooked part in American history, Tiya Miles, author of Ties That Bind: The Story of an Afro-Cherokee Family in Slavery and Freedom, gives a chilling view into a part of American history that many may not know about and may wish not to know of. Miles work follows the story and life of Shoe Boots (a Cherokee), Doll (his African slave and wife), and their children. In examining this strange and unique family dynamic, Miles seeks to gain a broader picture of the interconnected relationships of slavery, race, gender, family, and citizenship in the Cherokee Nation. Both investigative and critical at times, Miles’s Ties That Bind: The Story of an Afro-Cherokee Family in Slavery and Freedom is an impressive beast of a book that successfully goads its readers into provocative discussions and debates about the nature of racism, nationality and the harsh byproducts of slavery.…
Mary Jemison’s anxiety was gone and she could now fully experience the Native American lifestyle. A Native American woman’s daily routine was not much different from a white woman; cooking, planting and hoeing. She has now taken the identity of a Native American woman, and she enjoys being with them. She allowed her identity to change within, becoming one of their sisters, becoming family. Mary could have just given up and hated all the people around her but instead she was forgiving towards all of them. Trust was very important during the Native American time, they hat to trust one another and also trust the men to keep them safe from outsiders. Native Americans lived their life in fear never knowing what was coming next.…
The Cherokee are perhaps one of the most interesting of Native American Groups. Their life and culture are closely intertwined with early American settlers and the history of our own nation 's struggle for freedom. In the interest of promoting tolerance and peace, and with regard to the United States government 's handling of Native affairs, their story is one that is painful, stoic, and must not be forgotten.…
The Trails of Tears took place in the United States in the 1830s. Native Americans were forced to leave their home because of white Europeans thirsty for land, gold, and resources. The native Americans were forced to move from southeastern United States toward the west. Even the natives knew that their land was precious. They tried to negotiate ways to get to the west safely because it wasn’t fair that the whites could over rule them just because Andrew Jackson was president.…
Introduction The Trail of Tears was a time where five Native American tribes were forced from their homes. The Trail of Tears has lots of different perspectives, including but not limited to, the Cherokee Tribe and the government’s perspectives for and opposed to the mass migration. When the Native Americans were forced from their homes, the main tribe affected was the Cherokee. FIRST PARAGRAPH On the Trail of Tears, the five tribes forced from their homes were the Cherokee, the Chickasaw, the Choctaw, the Creek, and the Seminole (“Cherokee Nation vs. State of Georgia)”.…
The Trail of Tears, a gruesome event taking place in the mid 1800's. Andrew Jackson and his Indian removal Act, it costed the land of the Cherokees of the east Mississippi River to be taken away from them. Due to the land being stolen, the Cherokees had to migrate to the present-day of Oklahoma. With its devastating events such as, Hunger, disease, and exhaustion. Years later,…
The Trial of Tears was when the Native Americans in the Southast were forcibly removed from Georgia. They were made to march from Georgia to present-day Oklahoma. It was caused by multiple people and events, but there were also people who tried to stop this tragic event.…
To sum up, I learned that Cherokees had a hard life. People who were not white were discriminated against. Back in Little Tree’s time, there was not much diversity, especially in schools. Little tree was the only Cherokee in his school. Due to this, he was treated poorly by non-Cherokees and was thought of as unsanitary.…
As you read this work you can almost visualize the pawn shop and liquor store with the flashing neon signs taunting the Native American to come in and sell their soul. The Native American Indian evolves into a shell of what they once were and they sell all of their valuables for whatever the white man is willing to give them. They first sell off the material things, and next, then they begin to sell the things that required time and reflect the Native American history and a way of life. When the Indian has pawned everything except his heart, he eventually lets that go too, in a final act of defeat. The white man or Buffalo Bill, takes everything from the Native American, creates a business that will then profit from the Indian who wants to get a glimpse of their heritage, sold for a few bucks. Many of the pieces which may have taken years to create fetch a price that allows them to purchase alcohol just across the border of the reservation. The white man is profiting from the artifacts, which in effect, stole the Native American…