Some did, some didn't, and some tolerated them.
hot
forest
They accepted them like one of them self
i would like to know them i am 1/4 Cherokee my greatgrandmother was full blooded Cherokee. i would like to know about any thing .
They dressed like any other people.
Well Settlers made homes and towns in the frontier many American Indians already claimed that territory. Troubles occurred when settlers wanted to own the Indians land. So that means that it was a good place for settlers because they wanted the Indians territory. But as of the Indians they felt that the Americans were taking their land.
Well Settlers made homes and towns in the frontier many American Indians already claimed that territory. Troubles occurred when settlers wanted to own the Indians land. So that means that it was a good place for settlers because they wanted the Indians territory. But as of the Indians they felt that the Americans were taking their land.
It didnt begin with Native American Indians, white settlers were first offered bounties for scalps, the Indians picked it up from there. like the English bounties for grey squirrel tails etc.
The southern colonies like the rest of the original thirteen colonies were inhabited before the arrival of the European settlers by native Americans. The Native American tribes there were the Seminole, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Muscogee, Cherokee, Caddo, and Comanche.
The English settlers and Wampanoag Indians had nice weather during the first Thanksgiving harvest celebration in 1621.
have u found the answer? i need to know... i have a report on the cherokee and that would be some good information...
One of the first was created by Sequoyah, the leader of the Cherokee nation. It contained 85 characters, representing the syllables of the Cherokee language. It was used as far back as 1828, in the "Cherokee Phoenix," the first newspaper published by what were then called Indians (and today are called Native Americans). The newspaper was bilingual-- English and Cherokee. I enclose a link to some information about it, which includes images of what written Cherokee looked like.