60000
They got removed from the southeastern part of the U.S and went to the west.
The "Trail of Tears" began in 1836 and went on through 1839.
There is a Cherokee reservation in the Smoky Mountains of western North Carolina. Not many stayed there. Some went to Arkansas and Oklahoma.
Estimates vary on how many Cherokee went on the infamous Trail of Tears. When the Cherokee arrived in Oklahoma, estimates are that around four thousand Indians had died. More were to die once they got there.
The cherokee tribe, because they went on it.
The states were very clear it 12 states that the trail of tears went threw it was very sad but bye bye world have fun with ur A+ bye bye oh and yes the trail of tears wasn't right I think we should help our Indians. Here is a joke don't make fun of our stupid people they might all go away like our blonds
The trail of tears crossed Tennessee, Kentucky, Illinois, Missouri, Arkansas, and Oklahoma
There was no real result. Jackson did not do the things he promised, in fact he went back on his word and pushed the Indians off their land. You can see an example of this treatment by looking at the Trail of Tears
The State of Oklahoma.
Well, the question isn't clearly enough stated to answer. the migration of the Cherokees is synonimous with the end of the Trail of Tears process, if that's what you mean.This is not what I mean. I have a history paper due on Wednesday, and the thing I have to write about is "Why do historians not have an accurate account of what went happened during the trail of tears?"I'm just a seventh grader, but I'm doing a research projects on the Trail of Tears, and an answer to your question could be, Historians have an accurate account of what happened during the Trail of Tears because many Cherokees and Settlers did live through it, and the story was passed on. Also, I'm sure many Americans kept a record or wrote down things about it.Hey, I just wanna say that he/she was asking why historians don't have a good record of what happened on the trail of tears. Well if i had to answer it I would say that many of the documents were damaged or lost on the long journey and that many of the Cherokee on the trail didn't have a useful way to record what happened to them. That's what I would say.
Indians and pioneers in hopes of a new life
The Native American nations of the Cherokee , Muscogee (Creek) , Seminole , Chickasaw , and Choctaw nations .