There was no prison camp. They were walked from FL to OK and many died. In OK they were put on a reservation.
The Trail of Tears was when Cherokee Indians were taken from there homes by the government, and the Japanese Internment camps were there because the government didn't trust Japanese people.
Yes, the Trail of Tears was a cruel and tragic event. Thousands of Native Americans were forcibly removed from their ancestral lands and subjected to grueling conditions during their forced march to designated territories. Many died from exposure, disease, and starvation along the way.
extermination camps
extermination camps
one
hitler start sending people prison/concentration camps in 1933 and 1945.
Yes, and he sent millions to concentration camps and termination camps which were worse than prisons.
To Prison Camps In Siberia
You have two points in history confused. There were no prospectors or mines in relationship with the Trail of Tears. The Trail of Tears refers to the route followed by 15,000 Cherokee during their removal in 1838 when they were forced to march from GA to Oklahoma. In 1791 a US treaty recognized Cherokee territory in GA as independent and the Cherokee people had a written constitution. The Cherokee were forced to abandon their property, livestock, and ancestral burial grounds to move to camps in Tennessee. From there they were forced in the middle of winter to march another 800 miles to Indian Territory. An estimated 4,000 people ( over 25% of the Cherokee Nation) died on the march. In 1987 the Trail of Tears became a national monument serving as a symbol for the wrongs suffered by the Native Americans at the hands of the U S government.
Yes, Jews were systematically rounded up and sent to extermination camps.
b dowd is da boss
They are sometimes referred to collectively as The Gulag.