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  1. Aug 3, 2023 · Three groups left in the summer, traveling from present-day Chattanooga by rail, boat, and wagon, primarily on the Water Route. But river levels were too low for navigation; one group, traveling overland in Arkansas, suffered three to five deaths each day due to illness and drought.

  2. 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.

  3. Aug 3, 2023 · A Brief History. In 1830, Congress passed the Indian Removal Act, which required the various Indian tribes in today’s southeastern United States to give up their lands in exchange for federal territory which was located west of the Mississippi River.

  4. Trail of Tears, Forced migration in the United States of the Northeast and Southeast Indians during the 1830s. The discovery of gold on Cherokee land in Georgia (1828–29) catalyzed political efforts to divest all Indians east of the Mississippi River of their property.

  5. 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. Of that number, it is thought that about 4,000 died, having succumbed to hunger, exhaustion, cold, or disease, whether in removal camps in the East, on the westward ...

  6. 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.

  7. The Trail of Tears — The Indian Removals. Over 20,000 Cherokees were forced to march westward along the Trail of Tears. About a quarter of them died along the way. Not everyone was included in the new Jacksonian Democracy. There was no initiative from Jacksonian Democrats to include women in political life or to combat slavery.

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