Why did certain Native American tribes take this annual journey across the continent?
View Video, Living with the Land We weren't nomads, we had a annual journey that we made. "They were the freest people the world has ever known." They obtained their food, water, and other supplies they needed from their surrounding environment.
Link to Cherokee Print |
Photo A: Morning Tears |
Photo B: Image Credit: The Granger Collection, New York |
Link: Obsevation Sheet |
Photo C: Choctaw Trail of Tears Link to Choctaw Print |
What was the Indian Removal Act? The Indian Removal Act was the law that ordered all Indians east of the Mississippi River to move west on that river.
Fifth grade students have been studying the Age of Jackson.
Why it Matters . . .
American Indians were forced to move west, and live in a new environment. Their removal changed the history of people both east and west of the Appalachians. Retrieved from, Houghton Mifflin Social Studies Textbook (2005)
Andrew Jackson: Good, Evil, & the Presidency: An Introduction of an overview of the two-term American president.
References:
John G. Burnett’s and Samuel Worcester Story of the Removal of the Cherokees
Cherokee survivor later recalled: "Let me tell you this. My grandmother was a little girl in Georgia when the soldiers came to her house to take her family away. . . . The soldiers were pushing her family away from their land as fast as they could"
Walking the Trails of Tears Students will read accounts and learn about what happened on the Trail of Tears. They will discuss the causes of removal, explore the trail, and understand the effects it had on the Cherokee.
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