Trail Of Tears

By Glade6
  • Americans and Cherokee leaders signed The Treaty Of Hopewell

    Americans and Cherokee leaders signed The Treaty Of Hopewell
  • Holston was sighned,The Treaty Of Holston was signed

    Holston was sighned,The Treaty Of Holston was signed
    The Treaty Of Holston was signed
  • Period: to

    Trail of Tears

  • Thomas Jefferson signs the Georgia Compact

    Thomas Jefferson signs the Georgia Compact
    Thomas Jefferson was born on april 13 1743 in Shadwell Virginia.
  • The death of indians

    The death march of the Cherokee Indians from their homelands in the east to the Indian Territory came to be known as the Trail of Tears. In 1830, President Andrew Jackson signed the Indian Removal Act to relocate eastern tribes.
  • Frew natives good be in U.S.A

    By the end of the decade, very few natives remained anywhere in the southeastern United States.
  • In 1835

    In 1835, a few self-appointed representatives of the Cherokee nation negotiated the Treaty of New Echota, which traded all Cherokee land east of the Mississippi for $5 million, relocation assistance and compensation for lost property.
  • 120,000 native americans

    120,000 native americans
    At the beginning of the 1830s, nearly 125,000 Native Americans Where not like we are today
  • Andrew Jackson

    Andrew Jackson
    Guided by policies favored by President Andrew Jackson, who led the country from 1828 - 1837, the Trail of Tears 1837 to 1839 was the forced westward migration of American Indian tribes from the South and Southeast.
  • They join the white socitey

    They join the white socitey
    At one point the cherokees adapted the english lifestyle and made houses and got horses and other livestock.
  • Cherokees

    Cherokees
    At one point the cherokees adapted the english lifestyle and made houses and got horses and other livestock.
  • This is a pitcher of people on the trail of tears

    This is a pitcher of people on the trail of tears
  • The Story

    The Story
    The Story The discovery of the New World by European explorers caused endless problems for American Indians, whose homelands were gradually taken from them and whose cultures were dramatically altered, and in some cases destroyed, by the invasion.