Cherokee Indians are found in Mississippi; and they are sometimes referred to as Mississippi Indians.
Yes, the Cherokee Indians were a very friendly tribe. They were the largest group of Indians in the United States.
Not traditionally. The original Cherokee land spread from present day Tennessee to the Atlantic coast, and from the Virginias to Georgia. The eastern tribe remains in the mountains of North Carolina and Tennessee. A portion of the tribe was force moved to Oklahoma Territory in 1836-7, and the western reservation is there now.
No, Cherokee Indians were not Muslim. Neither would they convert to Islam or follow the teachings of the Islamic prophet Mohammad.
Cherokee Indians decorated their clothes with varies beads, paints, and symbols. This helped to identify them and project their personality onto their clothing.
this is from MA state report & yeah
The Cherokee Indian tribe use to live in Georgia,Kentucky, Tennessee Virginia, and the Carolinas.The Cherokee Indians were forced to move to Oklahoma in the 1800's.
The Cherokee Indians never lived there. They live in North and South Carolina, Tennessee, alambama, and more places
The Cherokee round up has no specified start point. Cherokee Indians were removed and "round up "from their homes in Alabama, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Georgia.
The Cherokee Indians originally lived in the Appalachia area in the mountains. They were found in Georgia, North and South Carolina, Virginia, Kentucky, and Tennessee.
The were located in North ad South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Kentucky, and Missouri
Cherokee Indians are found in Mississippi; and they are sometimes referred to as Mississippi Indians.
What were the Cherokee Indians resources? it was eating and selling things
registering in the roll in oklahoma for cherokee indians
Elk and deer were the first animal inhabitants approximately 12,000 years after the Ice Age. Humans didn't arrive until 300 B.C., and there is no "typical" Tennessee native.
Memphis was originally settled by Cherokee Indians, and during the 18th century it was just a territory. It was not until 1796 that Tennessee became a state.
The name Tennessee came from the Cherokee village Tanasi.