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  1. historic trail signs. The Auto Tour Route signs along highways, streets, and backcountry roads guide you to official trail sites and segments. The Original Route signs tell you that you are retracing the exact or nearly exact historic route taken by the Cherokee during the removal.

  2. May 20, 2024 · This map highlights different sites that can be visited along the trail. You'll find museums, interpretive centers, and historic sites that provide information and interpretation on this interactive map. Last updated: May 20, 2024.

  3. The Trail of Tears was the forced relocation during the 1830s of Indigenous peoples of the Southeast region of the United States (including the Cherokee, Creek, Chickasaw, Choctaw, and Seminole, among others) to the so-called Indian Territory west of the Mississippi River.

  4. The infographic’s central visual is a map showing the routes of the Trail of Tears in 1838–39. It was by these routes that some 15,000 Cherokee were to set out for the West.

  5. Jul 18, 2023 · Where is this National Historic Trail? Take a look at interactive, historic, and trip planning maps to learn more about locations along the trail.

  6. A Trail of Tears map of Southern Illinois from the USDA – U.S. Forest Service. It eventually took almost three months to cross the 60 miles (97 kilometres) on land between the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers. [102] The trek through southern Illinois is where the Cherokee suffered most of their deaths.

  7. Jan 29, 2024 · The Trail of Tears is the name given to the forced migration of the Cherokee people from their ancestral lands in Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee, and North Carolina to new territories west of the Mississippi River. The journey, undertaken in the fall and winter of 1838–1839, was fatal for one-fourth of the Cherokee population.

  8. Nov 9, 2009 · The Trail of Tears was the deadly route used by Native Americans when forced off their ancestral lands and into Oklahoma by the Indian Removal Act of 1830.

  9. Cherokee Trail of Tears Most Cherokee refused to recognize the Treaty of New Echota; few had moved after two years. In the spring of 1838, 7,000 soldiers under Gen. Winfeld Scott moved against the Cherokee Nation. The removal efort began in Georgia, where Cherokee families were uprooted and driven— sometimes at bayonet point—to “round-up”

  10. Designated as a national historic trail by Congress in 1987, the Trail commemorates the forced removal of the Cherokee people from their homelands in the southeastern United States to Indian Territory (present-day Oklahoma) in 1838 – 1839.

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