With
more and more immigrants heading south, the
Cherokee were driven deeper into the mountains.
Acre-by-acre, treaty-by-treaty, white settlement
steadily consumed the Smokies. The Cherokee held
onto their homeland as long as they could, but
the election of Andrew Jackson as president
spelled doom for the Cherokee. Jackson, a long
time Indian hater, defied treaties, ignored
Supreme Court rulings, and jailed Cherokee
activists. In 1835, Jackson convinced a handful
of cooperative Cherokees to sign the infamous
Treaty of New Echota, giving them $5,000,000 and
7,000,000 acres in Oklahoma in return for all
Cherokee lands and a pledge to leave the
mountains peacefully.
Although their ancient homeland
was taken, many Cherokee refused to leave and a
standoff ensued. In 1838, virtually the entire
standing army of the United States occupied
Cherokee Territory, rounding up families by
gunpoint and forcing them into crowded
stockades. A few Cherokee were sent on river
barges, but most would be marched to Oklahoma, a
journey known as the "Trail of Tears".
They traveled without shelter or
adequate supplies. Weary and defenseless, the
natives became easy targets for bandits and
disease. Of the 16,000 Cherokee who traveled the
infamous Trail of Tears, 4,000 died before
reaching Oklahoma.
The Chamber of Discord, at the Museum of the
Cherokee Indian, is filled with bouncing sounds,
dramatic sculpture and Sequoyah's syllabify
illustrating three Cherokee political opinions
concerning their removal from the Great Smokies.
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 The Chamber of Discord, at the Museum of the Cherokee Indian, is filled with bouncing sounds, dramatic sculpture and Sequoyah's
syllabify illustrating three Cherokee political opinions concerning their removal from the Great Smokies.
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