The Route Of Trail Of Tears

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
“Wish you were HERE” Postcard On the FRONT of your half sheet: – Draw a “postcard” image representing the Trail of Tears, the Indian Removal Act, or the.
Advertisements

Indian Removal Act – Trail of Tears Mr. Griffin. How did the Cherokees fight back against the Federal Government differently than their ancestors?
Jackson’s Decisions December 6, 1830 President Andrew Jackson called for the relocation of eastern Native American tribes to land west of the Mississippi.
The Seminole Wars. British Map (ca. 1776) Forbes Purchase Map (ca. 1817)
Indian Removal Act By: Cameron Elizabeth Schulze.
1. WHY DID THE TRAIL OF TEARS HAPPEN? 2. WAS INDIAN REMOVAL A GOOD THING FOR THE U.S.? FOR NC? 3. WAS INDIAN REMOVAL THE RIGHT THING TO DO? Essential Questions:
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.
 1.The United States was growing at a fast rate in the early 1800s. 2.The American citizens spread west and south to make new homes, towns and then cities.
Trail of Tears Lesson 1 in Westward Expansion: Native Americans.
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.
Trail of Tears In 1838 and 1839, as part of Andrew Jackson's Indian removal policy, the Cherokee nation was forced to give up its lands east of the Mississippi.
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.
Trail of Tears Image 1 :
 Friendly to natives bc he needed them to help fight during war  But his support came from white voters  He pushed for Indian Removal Act (1830) 
Unit 8: Lecture 2 – The Age of Jackson (Part II) Mr. Smith 8 th grade U.S. History December 6 th & 7 th, 2012.
Manifest Destiny and Native Americans. “Manifest Destiny” Coined in 1845 Belief that God had destined the U.S. to reach the Pacific Justified westward.
Indian Removal Map Activity
Indians in America.  Since 1600, white settlers had pushed Native Americans westward as they took more and more of their land.  By the 1820s, about.
INDIAN REMOVAL POLICY By 1820’s, about 100,000 Native Americans remained East of the Mississippi River. Major tribes were Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw,
LF US History Objective Agenda Native American Removal
Indian Removal.
Jackson’s Policy towards Native Americans
“Walk” the Trail of Tears
Chapter Overview LEQ:.
Indian Removal Act Mr. Drabinski’s 8th grade history class
Native Americans
The Trail of tears by: jonathan & t.j..
Bellringer: Describe what is happening in the picture.
Trail of Tears PowerPoint & Notes © Erin Kathryn 2015.
Schuyler Clark and Brandon Deal Mrs. Garcie’s 4th period 5th Grade
Indian Removal By Mrs. Andreatta Pg
JEOPARDY! Westward Expansion Click Once to Begin Template by
A Changing Nation Section 4: Indian Removal
Indian Removal Map Activity
The Indian Removal Act.
Cherokee Indians Recognize American territorial expansions and its effects on relations with European powers and Native Americans. f. Understand.
President Andrew Jackson The Trail of Tears
Trail of Tears PowerPoint & Notes © Erin Kathryn 2015.
The Trail of Tears 1838.
Objectives Describe the culture of Native Americans in the Southeast.
Native American Tragedy
Terms and People Sequoyah – Cherokee leader and creator of the Cherokee alphabet.
Causes and Effects of the Seminole Wars
קורס פיננסי – מושגים פיננסיים / כלכליים
Chapter 10, Lesson 4 ACOS #10: Describe events between 1803 and 1860 that led to the expansion of the territory of the United States ACOS #10a: Trace.
Indian Removal.
Indian Removal.
Choctaw, Creek, Chickasaw,
Indian Removal Map Activity
Tuesday, November 17th Agenda: -Unit Intro -Trading Cards
List the 3 “G’s” of Westward Expansion.
The Indian Removal Act.
Objectives Describe the culture of Native Americans in the Southeast.
Terms and People Worchester vs. Georgia – The Supreme Court declared that Georgia’s law (which made Native Americans give up their land) had no force within.
The Age of Jackson, : Indian Removal
Trail of Tears Photo Analysis of the removal of the Cherokee’s from their ancestral homelands.
Forced to Leave Indian Removal Act.
TRAIL OF TEARS AND THE SOUTHWEST
Do Now Using your notes and prior knowledge, Find three examples of how the U.S. has either had conflict or change because of expansion in the.
JEOPARDY! Westward Expansion Click Once to Begin Template by
Indian Policy Block 2 Summary: Americans were hungry for land
Unit 2: Westward Expansion
“The Trail Where They Cried”
The Indian Removal Act.
Daily Quiz 1/8 Who did the Tariff of Abominations hurt?
The Trail of Tears.
Section 4 – pg 229 Indian Removal
Indian Removal Act of 1830 Monday April 1, 2019
Indian Policy Jackson wanted to open up lands to Americans – lands with fertile soil for cash crops- from Georgia to the Mississippi – they found gold.
The Trail of Tears 1838.
Presentation transcript:

The Route Of Trail Of Tears

This map of the trail of tears shows you what states they walked through and all the spots they was forced to walk. Also this map shows what states they had to walk through. This map shows that there is not just one route it is many other roads.

In October 1838 approximately 13,000 Cherokee people started off for Indian territory. Every tribe experienced similar sufferings and most lost many of their partners. The trail of tears took place in the winter of 1838-39. 3250 people died, some of the reasons they died was they struggled of not having the food they needed other people died because there was way more people on the trail of tears than expected. But the people who forced them to go would think who cares and since there was more people than expected there was not as many blankets for warmth so people died from coldness. That’s not all the reasons some died though there is more reasons.

So that is my map and other things about the trail of tears