Cherokee Indians Western Migration Presented By: Alyssa Galloway, Sarah Hampton, & Anexus Ayala.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Grade 4 Social Studies Online
Advertisements

N.C. During the Early 1800’s and the Trail of Tears.
#bellwork 9/4 #bellwork 9/4 Get out 2 sheets of paper for notes. Get out 2 sheets of paper for notes. In your bellwork section work on the question below:
Chapter 7, Section 2 Pages  How and why should a country seek to expand its territory?  How should a nation treat regional differences?  Are.
President Andrew Jackson The Trail of Tears
Reading a Document for Historical Information Step 1. Observation A. Study the image for 2 minutes. and write down an overall impression of the photograph:
Chapter 10, Section 3 Indian Removal.
Indian Removal Act (IRA). Objectives: 1. Identify the reasons for Indian removal. 2. Explain why the trip became known as the "Trail of Tears" for the.
C H E R O K E E N A T I V E A M E R I C A N S
Expeditions for US Expansion. Lewis and Clark Expedition  Who were they?  Meriwether Lewis & William Clark  Two famous explorers  What was their mission.
$100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 $100 $200 $300 $400 $500EXPANSION.
The Mississippian Culture was the last pre-historic development in North America, thriving from about 1000 AD until the arrival of European explorers.
The Westward Expansion. After the revolutionary war, Americans headed west to find new land and wealth. In 1803 Thomas Jefferson sent Meriwether Lewis.
Trail of Tears.
Native American Removal from Georgia October 1, 2012.
Jackson’s Policy towards Native Americans
Ch.12, Sec.2 – Jackson’s Policy Toward Native Americans
The Age of Jackson. Learning Targets I can define “Jacksonian Democracy” as it relates to the “common man”. I can compare and contrast the relationship.
INDIAN REMOVAL ACT Based on the current living conditions of the Americans and natives was the Indian Removal Act justified?
Manifest Destiny By: Dhruvil Patel The belief of expansion to the west…
What is so special about this Alabama land? In the early 1800s, White settlers wanted the land with rich soil to raise cotton. The only problem was that.
The Treatment of Native Americans left a “Trail of T.E.A.R.S.
  . Indian Lands The Trail The Cherokee Seal Indian Removal Act Lasting Effects.
Stories of the Oregon Country began in the ______ Stretched from northern California to the southern border of Alaska. The ______________________________________.
Chapter 10, Section 3 Pages 332 – 335. President Andrew Jackson had become famous as an American Indian fighter. He had no sympathy with Native Americans’
US History Bell Ringer What was the Trail of Tears?
The Diary of Sallie Hester,
Trail of Tears Lesson 1 in Westward Expansion: Native Americans.
Trail of Tears Lesson 1 in Westward Expansion: Native Americans.
The Five Indian Culture Areas  The map shows the five Indian culture areas.  In what area can you find the Cherokee?  In the Eastern Woodland culture.
SSH4H6 The students will explain the westward expansion of America between 1801 and 1861.
Removal of Native Americans Balancing Nationalism and Sectionalism Part 5.
Manifest Destiny Phashod Moore. The San Jacinto River The battle of san Jacinto lasted only 18 min.Although the Texans where outnumbered, they killed.
Jackson and the Indians Vs.. Indians in the Southeast By the 1820s, only about 100,000 still lived east of the Mississippi, and most of them were in the.
The Trail of Tears Photographs and information from discoveryed. com and pbs.org/teachers.
ANDREW JACKSON  Born in Poverty, Andrew Jackson ( ) had become a wealthy Tennessee lawyer and rising young politician by 1812, when war broke.
Andrew Jackson and Indian Removal
JACKSONIAN DEMOCRACY Key events of Andrew Jackson’s Presidential Term.
Conflicts Over Land Chapter 10, Section 4. Questions ► Why did many Americans want the Cherokee removed from Georgia? What was Andrew Jackson’s response?
Georgia Studies Unit 3: Revolution, Statehood, and Westward Expansion
Imagine you are sitting at home and suddenly there is a knock on your door. It is the US Military and they tell you that you have 10 minutes to pack only.
Indian Removal Jackson’s Goal? 1830  Indian Removal Act
Georgia Studies Unit 3: Revolution, Statehood, and Westward Expansion Lesson 5: Indian Removal Study Presentation.
Jackson’s Policy Toward Native Americans Main Idea: During his presidency Native Americans were forced to move west of the Mississippi River, forever changing.
The Age of Jackson Indian Removal Chapter 9 Section 3.
DO NOW Describe ONE of the following two events: – Bank Wars OR – Nullification Crisis.
Andrew Jackson and Indian Removal. England established colonies in North America. As the population grew, colonists pushed further west into the territories.
North Carolina. What role do the visual arts play in Native American culture?
Chapter 10 Section 3: Indian Removal. Indian Removal Act: Native Americans had lived in settlements from ______to Mississippi, but Jackson wanted to open.
PowerPoint & Note Taker. © Kara Lee The first six Presidents of the United States came from either Virginia or Massachusetts. All six Presidents also.
By: Michael Hoff Period 3 Team Lewis Video. The Trail of Tears The Trail of Tears is the route that Indians were forced to march while being relocated.
Created by Lindsay Johnson Table of Contents Introduction Pre-Test Pre-Test Answers Vocabulary Words.
Native American Policy
Native American Indian Removal
Jackson’s Policy Toward Native Americans
LF US History Objective Agenda Native American Removal
Chapter 9 Section 3 Indian Removal.
President Andrew Jackson The Trail of Tears
Grade 5 Social Studies Online
Conflicts Over Land Chapter 10, Section 4.
Conflicts Over Land Chapter 10, Section 4.
U.S Expansion Worcester vs. Georgia Indian Removal Act
Westward Movement: The Expansion of the United States
Indian Removal Act of 1830 & “The Trail of Tears”
The First Carolinians: Native American Groups of North Carolina
Trail of Tears.
Thinking Question Describe your “home”.
The Trail of Tears One of the most shameful moments in our American history is the story of the Trail of Tears. It is the story of how we treated the.
Trail of Tears.
Ch. 14 the New West 1.
Presentation transcript:

Cherokee Indians Western Migration Presented By: Alyssa Galloway, Sarah Hampton, & Anexus Ayala

About The Cherokee  Cherokee-A powerful tribe of the “Iroquoian” family, with land stretching from the region of the southern Alleghenies, in southwest Virginia, to the west of North and South Carolina, and also in northern Georgia, eastern Tennessee, and northeast Alabama, and claiming even as far as the Ohio River. The Cherokee’s migration was called the “Trail of Tears” Iroquoian

Being Removed Soon gold was discovered in Georgia, in the Cherokee territory. In 1830, Congress passed the “Indian Removal Act” forcing the Cherokee to migrate somewhere else. Although the Cherokee attempted to fight against the law by establishing themselves as an independent nation, it was a battle they would not win. They were promised many riches for their land, but in reality, it was barely anything at all.

Migration For the Cherokee  Initially over 800 Cherokee men, women, and children were forced from their land and their homes, and began the difficult journey west during the fall of  They left behind their homes, their schools, and their churches, starting out with only a few covered wagons, as they traveled out into the unknown.  Although they did have food, it was only what the “white people” had given them.  With very little food and facilities, the Cherokee were forced to march over a thousand miles in the middle the brutal winter of  Uniting together with 4 other wagon trails, the Cherokee now had a total of over 15,000 people among them.

The Trail of Tears  The loss of life during the early migrations was enormous.  Facing hunger, disease and exhaustion, over 4000 Cherokee died during this migration.  The Cherokee migration became known as “The Trail of Tears”, which in Cherokee means “The trail where they cried”.  Those that survived the journey settled into what is now known as Oklahoma.

Reference Page &hl=en&lr=&q=native+americans+migrati ng &hl=en&lr=&q=native+americans+migrati ng rokees+land&svnum=10&hl=en&lr=&start =20&sa=N rokees+land&svnum=10&hl=en&lr=&start =20&sa=N

Credits Thanks to Alyssa’s Mom Thanks to Alyssa’s Mom Thanks to Mrs. Purcell Thanks to Mrs. Purcell Presented by: Presented by: ALYSSA CAITLYN GALLOWAY, SARAH ELIZABETH HAMPTON, SARAH ELIZABETH HAMPTON, AND ANEXUS JORDAN AYALA