Trail of Tears
Trial of Tears and the Five Civilized Tribes
During the early years of 1800s,
valuable gold deposits were discovered in
tribal lands, which by previous
cessions had been reduced to about seven
million acres in northwest Georgia,
eastern Tennessee, and southwest North
Carolina. In 1819 Georgia
appealed to the U.S. government to remove the
Cherokee from Georgia
lands. When the appeal failed, attempts were made to
purchase the territory.
Meanwhile, in 1820 the Cherokee established a
governmental system
modeled on that of the United States, with an elected
principal chief, a
senate, and a house of representatives. Because of this
system, the Cherokee
were included as one of the so-called Five Civilized
Tribes. The other four
tribes were the Chickasaw, Choctaw, Creek, and the
Seminoles. In 1832 the
Supreme Court of the United States ruled that the
Georgia legislation was
unconstitutional; federal authorities, following
Jackson’s policy of Native
American removal, ignored the decision. About
five hundred leading
Cherokee agreed in 1835 to cede the tribal territory in
exchange for
$5,700,000 and land in Indian Territory (now Oklahoma). Their
action was
repudiated by more than nine-tenths of the tribe, and several
members of the
group were later assassinated. In 1838 federal troops began
forcible evicting
the Cherokee. Approximately one thousand escaped to the
North Carolina
Mountains, purchased land, and incorporated in that state;
they were the
ancestors of the present-day Eastern Band. Most of the tribe,
including the
Western Band, was driven west about eight hundred miles in a
forced march,
known as the Trail of Tears. The march west included 18,000 to
20,000
people, of whom about 4000 perished through hunger, disease, and
exposure. The Cherokee are of the Iroquoian linguistic family. Their
economy, like that of the other southeastern tribes, was based on intensive
agriculture, mainly of corn, beans, and squash. Deer, bear, and elk were
hunted. The tribe was divided into seven matrilineal clans that were
dispersed
in war and peace moieties (half-tribes). The people lived in
numerous
permanent villages, some of which belonged to the war moiety, the
rest to the
peace moiety. In the early 19th century, the Cherokee
demonstrated unusual
adaptability to Western institutions, both in their
governmental changes and in
their adoption of Western method of animal
harvesting and farming. Public
schools were established and in the 1820s, a
tribal member invented an
85-character syllable script for the Cherokee
language. Widespread literacy
followed almost immediately. In 1828 the first
Native American newspaper,
the Cherokee Phoenix, began publication. Today in
Oklahoma, much of the
culture has remained the same. Their traditional
crafts are most strongly
preserved by the Eastern Band where their basketry
is considered to be
equal to or better than that of earlier times. In
Oklahoma the Cherokee live
both on and off the reservation, scattered in
urban centers and in isolated
rural regions. Their occupations range form
fishing to industrial labor to
business management. In North Carolina,
farming, forestry, factory work,
and tourism are sources of income. As of
1990 there were 308,132
Cherokee descendants in the United States. Another
member of the five
tribes is the Seminoles, a Native American tribe of the
Muskogean language
family. Most now live in Oklahoma and southern Florida.
The Seminole tribe
developed in the 18th century from members of the Creed
Confederacy,
mostly Creeks and Hitchiti, who raided and eventually settled
in Florida.
After the United States acquired Florida in 1819, the
territorial governor,
Andrew Jackson, initiated a vigorous policy of tribal
removal to open the land
for white settlers. After the capture of their
leader Osceola in 1837 and the
end of the Second Seminole War in 1842,
several thousand Seminole were
forcibly moved west to Indian Territory. At
the end of the Third Seminole
War in 1858, about 250 more were sent west.
The rest were allowed to
remain, and their descendants signed a peace treaty
with the United States in
1935. In 1964 the Miccosukee signed a 50-year
agreement with national
Park Service that allows the Miccosukee access to
more than 300 acres of
the Everglades. The Florida Seminole have five
reservations. They farm, hunt,
fish, and some run tourist-related
businesses. Many still live in thatch-roofed,
open-sided houses on stilts
and wear patchwork and appliqué clothing. The
Seminole in Oklahoma were
given a smaller reservation after the American
Civil War. In the late 19th
century they yielded to pressure to divide their
tribal land into individual
allotments and cede the surplus to the United States;
this land was opened
to settlers in 1889. In 1990 Seminole descendants
numbered 13, 797. Many
were Baptists, but both the Florida and Oklahoma
groups retained traditional
Muskogean observances. The three remaining
tribes, Choctaw, Chickasaw, and
the Creek, are all close in relationship. All
tribes are of the Muskogean
linguistic family and all occupied an area that
now includes Georgia,
Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, and Kentucky. The
Chickasaw lived in
dwellings constructed alongside streams and rivers rather
than in villages.
They obtained food by hunting, fishing, and farming. The
Creek were an
agricultural tribe, living in villages consisting of log houses.
Creek women
cultivated corn, squash, beans, and other crops, and the men
hunted and
fished. The Choctaw were less warlike that their traditional
enemies, the
Chickasaw and the Creek. They lived in mud and bark cabins
with thatched
roofs. They were also agricultural people, probably the most
able farmers of
the southeastern region. They also raised cattle, fished, and
hunted. In
1990 the Chickasaw and their descendants numbered 20,631, the
Creek heritage
numbered 43,550, and a large number of Choctaw and their
descendants live
principally in Oklahoma and also in Mississippi and
Louisiana. During the
18th and 19th centuries the Choctaw were forced to
move farther and farther
west to avoid conflict with European settlers. By
1842 they had ceded most
of their land to the United States and were
relocated in Indian Territory,
land set aside for them in present-day
Oklahoma. Here the Choctaw became,
along with Creek, Cherokee,
Chickasaw, and Seminole, part of a group of
Native Americans known as
the Five Civilized Tribes, so called because they
had organized governments
the establishment of public schools and
newspapers.