The Supreme Court in Worcester v. Georgia, 31 U.S. 515 (1832), ruled that the Cherokee was a sovereign nation. Missionary Samuel Worchester's previous conviction was set aside, ordering that states did not have the right to enter Indian land, having no jurisdiction there.
Many individuals and organizations supported the Cherokee claim for recognition as an independent nation. These included prominent figures like Major Ridge and John Ross, who advocated for the rights of the Cherokee people and their sovereignty. Additionally, organizations such as the American Baptist Home Mission Society and the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions also supported the Cherokee's fight for recognition.
(Place answer here)
1827
Treaty Of Paris
The Cherokee were the largest southeastern Woodland tribe at the time of European contact. The Cherokee Nation was the largest federally recognized tribe in the United States, but the Navajo Nation has overtaken them in recent years.
The treaty of Paris.
no
Cherokee
Cherokee Indians I believe.
In the year 1988 the federal court heard the case of Nero v. Cherokee Nation. This case went through many appeals and in 2006 the Cherokee nation Tribunal rules that Cherokee Freedmen were allow to apply of Cherokee citizenship.
honestly i think a territory that is controlled by an independent goverment
Previous federal policy had recognized the Cherokee as a seperate nation with its own laws.
Previous federal policy had recognized the Cherokee as a seperate nation with its own laws.