This research proposal will give an overview of what led to relocation of the Cherokee Native Americans from their native lands in Georgia to Tahlequah, Oklahoma.
In brief the Trail of Tears as this relocation is usually referred to, is the US government enforced relocation of the Cherokee Native Americans from their native lands in Georgia to Tahlequah, Oklahoma (Calloway, 2008 p.34). This march was a distressing and tedious one for the Cherokee Nation. As a result more than 4000 deaths occurred during the march and afterwards in Oklahoma (Calloway, 2008 p.36). Approximately, 20% of the Cherokee Nation died either during the march, or shortly afterwards due to diseases such as dysentery among others (Calloway, 2008 p.36).
The Cherokee Nation call this march the Nunna daul Isunyi, or the Trail where We Cried (Steele, 1994 p.18). The march was exceptionally difficult, spanning over 1000 miles. Nearly, 2000 people died on the Trail of Tears, so cause for weeping is not hard to understand (Steele, 1994 p.18).
My thesis is that, the issues that determined this devastating decision by the US government started long before 1838, when Cherokees were forced to set foot on the Trail of Tears (Steele, 1994 p.23).
Expansion and land treaties in the areas surrounding Georgia in the 1800s resulted in the Compact of 1802 (Calloway, 2008 p.34). Part of this compact was an agreement to relocate Native American populations living on lands defined as Georgia (Calloway, 2008 p.45).
The Cherokee Indians, who affirmed themselves in 1827 to be a distinct nation, protested this relocation decision by the US government (Calloway, 2008 p.53). Several lawsuits went before the US Supreme Court contesting the right of the US government to forcibly relocate members of the Cherokee Nation (Calloway, 2008 p.22). Further, not all were in support of the actions that led to the Trail of Tears (Steele, 1994 p.23). In particular, Davy Crockett and writer Ralph Waldo Emerson contested the actions taken by the US government, and either spoke or wrote impassioned appeals on behalf of the Cherokees (Steele, 1994 p.23).
The treaty that was ratified by the US government, ostensibly giving up claim to any lands east of the Mississippi by the Cherokees, was not signed by any Cherokee leaders (Calloway, 2008 p.34). However, Presidential support first by Andrew Jackson and then Martin Van Buren was for the forced relocation (Calloway, 2008 p.34). Thus in 1838, at gunpoint, Cherokee people were removed from their homes and set off to march on the Trail of Tears (Calloway, 2008 p.46).
Most of the Cherokee Nation, about 17,000 people, was forced to march on the Trail of Tears, and much of the relocation was actually conducted and supervised by Cherokee leaders (Calloway, 2008 p.24). It should be noted that, the Cherokee group was extremely westernized as compared to some of the other Native American groups (Calloway, 2008 p.27). They lived in villages, made use of the American political system, and wealthy Cherokee people might own slaves (Calloway, 2008 p.27). Actually, 2000 slaves also marched on the Trail of Tears with their Cherokee owners (Calloway, 2008 p.27).
About 1000 Cherokee people were exempt from the enforced march because they lived on lands already owned by individuals who opposed the march (Steele, 1994 p.42). Additionally, about 400 Cherokee people in North Carolina also evaded the Trail of Tears (Steele, 1994 p.42). Nevertheless, most in the Cherokee Nation endured the indignities and the suffering of this forced march (Steele, 1994 p.44).
Perhaps, because of the Cherokee’s strength as a nation, and ability to work with the US government, the Cherokee Nation recovered from their devastating losses and has remained one of the largest groups of Native American people in modern days (Calloway, 2008 p.37). Efforts have been made in the past to commemorate and compensate for the intense suffering inflicted on the Cherokee Nation by the US government (Calloway, 2008 p.27). A 2000 mile trail called the Trail of Tears National Historic Trail was dedicated in 1987 (Steele, 1994 p.23). The trail crosses through nine states and serves as a reminder of the injustices committed by the US government toward the first Americans (Calloway, 2008).
Works cited
Calloway, Colin G. First Peoples: A Documentary Survey of American Indian History. Third Edition. New York and Boston: Bedford / St. Martin’s Press, 2008.
Steele, Ian K. Warpaths: Invasions of North America. New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1994.