The removal of the Cherokee people from Tennessee and Georgia, known as the Trail of Tears, was a forced relocation that occurred in the 1830s as a result of the Indian Removal Act, which aimed to open up Native American lands for white settlers. The Cherokee were compelled to march over 1,000 miles to designated Indian Territory in present-day Oklahoma, enduring harsh conditions, disease, and significant loss of life along the way. The term "Trail of Tears" reflects the immense suffering and sorrow experienced by the Cherokee during this brutal journey. Ultimately, the forced removal exemplified the broader injustices faced by Native Americans during westward expansion in the United States.
Nothing helped them. They were forced to walk from Georgia to Oakhoma. It is called the Trail of Tears.
"The Volunteer State."The nickname came from the War of 1812 when volunteer soldiers, under the leadership of General Andrew Jackson, fought bravely in the battle of New Orleans.
He wasn't - the name Sequoyah is a modern approximation of his real name, Ssiquoya. This may come from the Cherokee word siqua, a pig or a hog; the reason for the name is lost and we can never know exactly the significance of this.
Its known of the trail of tears because over 12,000 people were involved with the Indian removal act. the reason it was called this because people died from diseases and from being too cold.
They were called "Asi."
tennessee got its name from a cherokee indian village called "tenasi"
That would be the great state of Tennessee.
No. It is named after Cherokee Indian villages called "Tanasi".
The name is from the Cherokee Indian villages called "Tanasi".
The word 'Tennessee' is derived from the Cherokee village name "Tanasi." The exact translation or meaning of "Tanasi" is unclear, but it is believed to refer to a river or possibly winding river. Tennessee is a state located in the southeastern United States.
Nothing helped them. They were forced to walk from Georgia to Oakhoma. It is called the Trail of Tears.
The state of Tennessee got it's name from an Indian Cherokee village called "Tanasi." Tanasi means big bend and was used to describe a river in Tennessee.
The name Tennessee came from a Native American village called "Tansqui" in Cherokee country. Spanish explorers encountered the village in 1567. Historical accounts had many different spellings such as Tennassee, Tannasie, Tanasee and Tannessee.
Prior to the arrival of European settlers, Native Americans inhabited much of the land that would become the United States. The Shawnee, Cherokee, Yuchi, Koastai, Chickasaw, and Quapaw tribes called Tennessee home.
"The Volunteer State."The nickname came from the War of 1812 when volunteer soldiers, under the leadership of General Andrew Jackson, fought bravely in the battle of New Orleans.
It is the removal of half of the stomach called a gastroectomy
The names comes from the name for Cherokee Indian Villages "Tanasi".It comes from the Native American word "Tenasi" that means "big bend" and describes the TN river.The names comes from the name for Cherokee Indian Villages "Tanasi".the name was propobly adapted from the nameof the principal Cherokee village, tenasieit got it from the Indian Cherokee tribe called tanasi which means big bend and describes the Tennessee river