The Cheeroke trail was 1500 miles trough the rain snow ect. barefoot. The Trail of Tears veried depending on ther tribe, while the cheeroke is just the most famous.
the Cherokee Indians walked nearly 1200 miles.
tears never end as we r always with sin;it exists through out life to cleanse our sin.
46000
In the Trail of Tears, about 4,000 of the 16,000 Cherokee Indians died to their new journey to Oklahoma from Georgia.
It was a forced displacement of Native Americans from their ancestral home that resulted in huge casualties. I would be inordinately angry,and it was absolutely a terrible experience. So both.
The trail of tears
That was the Cherokee Trail of Tears - the only one history seems to want to remember. However, there truly were many, many trails of tears for the American Indian tribes.
Roughly 2000 Some Cherokee (and other tribes) chose to stay in their homeland and in the case of the Cherokee, became 'citizens' of the state where they were located as to avoid being relocated. Some went to Oklahoma and then returned because they didn't like the conditions there. The choice was to stay and become an 'American Citizen' or be removed.
read the book "trail of Tears". The Cherokee nation was the first native Americans to be relocated to the reservation.
trail of tears
The native Americans called their journey away from their homes the Trail of Tears.
The people on The Trail Of Tears were relocated because the Cherokee forced then to leave.
The Trail of Tears was a trail between nine states that was used to force the Native Americans from their lands.
The Trail of Tears was a trail between nine states that was used to force the Native Americans from their lands.
The Trail of Tears was a trail between nine states that was used to force the Native Americans from their lands.
Native Americans
The Trail of Tears was a solution in and of itself, its intent was to kill and displace Native Americans.
Bad. They were dying.
yes, it was called the trail of tears hope this helps-G
No, the government did not "do" the trail. They Native Americans they forced out of their homes "did" the trail.