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Ebook

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Product details

File Size: 4657 KB

Print Length: 205 pages

Page Numbers Source ISBN: 067003150X

Publisher: Penguin Books (July 5, 2007)

Publication Date: July 5, 2007

Sold by: Penguin Group (USA) LLC

Language: English

ASIN: B000TY19UM

Text-to-Speech:

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Word Wise: Enabled

Lending: Not Enabled

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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#445,191 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)

I have long wanted to read a decent history of the Trail of Tears. Years ago I tried reading John Ehle's book on the subject, but the pathos was too much. (I can well understand both the outrage and the sorrow, but I don't need my emotions prodded; I am looking for the facts.) So I turned to THE CHEROKEE NATION AND THE TRAIL OF TEARS, an installment in the Penguin Library of American Indian History.It did not begin very promisingly. The first chapter opens with the Cherokee creation legend -- involving the little water beetle, the Great Buzzard, and the brother and sister who were the first humans, the female giving birth to a child every seven days after her brother struck her with a fish. I realized, however, that the point of that first chapter was to show how much the Cherokees identified with their land, or their cosmos, where the states of Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee, and North Carolina now come together -- so I persevered. Fortunately, the book soon turned into what I was looking for: a good historical account of this particular episode (one of far too many) in the European-American displacement of Native Americans. I recently got into an argument with my passionate middle son, who wanted to characterize that displacement as "genocide"; I wouldn't go that far, but it certainly was a brand of ethnic cleansing.One of the things that makes the Cherokee episode particularly sad, and more notable, was that the Cherokees had gone a long ways towards adopting many of the trappings of Anglo-European civilization, including development of an alphabet for their native tongue and adopting a constitution. But their land was coveted, so they, too, were dismissed as savages, essentially people without rights. Once again in matters of Indian affairs, the federal government was mendacious. The State of Georgia was even worse. In May 1830 President Jackson signed the Removal Bill, providing in principle for the removal of many native peoples from the East to the West. Then the "Treaty" of New Echota was crammed down on the Cherokees (despite the vehement objections of about half of them, including the ones with the best claims to being the legitimate leaders of the Cherokee Nation), and pursuant to its terms, forcible removal of the Cherokees began in May 1838. Figures, of course, are far from precise, but it is estimated that out of 16,000 Cherokee Indians who were forcibly marched and transported from the Southern Appalachians to Arkansas and Oklahoma (on the "Trail of Tears"), 4,000 died en route. And once relocated, the Cherokees were visited with more broken promises, in terms of the provisions and money that had been guaranteed them in the treaties that had been forced on them. The entire episode so factionalized the Cherokees that relative tribal unity and harmony were not restored until after the Civil War.Authors Perdue and Green tell the story in a compact 160 pages. There is not a lot of detail, but the authors are quite good in recognizing and discussing "bigger picture" themes and forces. The story does get somewhat tangled in Chapter 5, what with the conflicting agendas of Andrew Jackson, Congress, the State of Georgia, and two factions of Cherokees, but I suspect that events themselves were tangled and messy and that it would have been difficult to cover the territory more clearly. For those interested in a responsible summary of the subject, I recommend the book.

I saw "Unto These Hills" and now it makes a lot more sense.

Wonderful book. Truthful.

Good Read!

Bought 3 copies of this book ...a copy for myself and 1 for each grandchild. I enjoyed reading this because it was the history of the area in which I live. It was a very touching and sad experience for so many. I think this would be a very good book for schools to have in their classrooms.

I gave this book as a gift to a friend

another text book for me and it looks pretty cool.

Great for my U.S. History research paper very informative and interesting

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