Yes. But it is most frequently by choice. Native Americans may honor their tribal culture by living some of the time in traditional structures. Other times, a tipi (tepee) is a temporary lodging when there is no alternative available.
No the Cherokee used two different types of homes; either the long house or wattle home. Tipi's were used by the Plains Indians as a very mobile living space.
yes
Some North American Indians did though not all.
The Cherokee as a tribe was never in New York - that was the Delaware (Lenapi), Mohawk and Iroquois.
He is part Cherokee. He isn't a member of the Cherokee Tribe, but has Cherokee ancestry.
The Seminole tribe were the furthest from Oklahoma, and were the most distant tribe. A great portion of their journey was done by ship however, and the Cherokee were the furthest eastern tribe forced to walk the entire distance.
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 damage to the Cherokee began in 1492, and continues to this day.
tipis
Yes
Log cabins. The Cherokee did not live in, and never have lived in, tipis.
claen and healty
tipis
no they lived by their means.
The Comanche tribe was a nomadic tribe, they lived in tipis and moved around.
We learned about these people in 3rd grade. They are a tribe of course, they used to live in Colorado.
The Cherokee was a nation or tribe itself
No, the Cherokee Indians did
The Shoshone Native American tribe lived in tipis. These were cone shaped houses made of buffalo-hide. The tipis kept them cool in the summer, and warm in the winter.
Tipis