This is most likely more of a person's opinion. In my belief, technically it was necessary, though the Europeans had no right to do such a thing.
No
It was called the Trail of Tears.
they went to Georgia,alabam,Tennessee,Kentucky,South Carolina and then finally to North Carolina that is the is the prosess of the trail of tears they went to Georgia,alabam,Tennessee,Kentucky,South Carolina and then finally to North Carolina that is the is the prosess of the trail of tears
The indians were seen as obstacles and they were gathered and driven from their homelands. For example, the Cherokees and Chawktaws were driven from the deep south to Oklahoma on what became known as "the trail of tears."
the Cherokee clans were rounded up and put in concentration camps before the journey. most of native Americans were in the apps.-north ga, north and south carolinas, virgina, and parts of tennesee. Along the east side of the United States.
No
The Trail of Tears (APEX)
Indians
Indians
Indians
The Trail of Tears (APEX)
The Trail of Tears (APEX)
It was called the Trail of Tears.
the trail of tears-apex
The Cherokee were not actually forced south, other than from crowding with settlers, they were forced west on the Trail of Tears.
No, the Trail of Tears is not in South Dakota. It primarily refers to the forced relocation of Native American nations, particularly the Cherokee, from their ancestral homelands in the Southeastern United States to designated Indian Territory, which is now Oklahoma. This tragic journey took place in the 1830s and involved several states, including Georgia, Tennessee, and Arkansas, but does not include South Dakota.
The trail to the South West is called the Southwest Trail. This was a 19th-century pioneer trail.