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  1. Trail of Tears. Routes, statistics, and notable events of the Trail of Tears. Trail of Tears, Forced migration in the United States of the Northeast and Southeast Indians during the 1830s. The discovery of gold on Cherokee land in Georgia (1828–29) catalyzed political efforts to divest all Indians east of the Mississippi River of their property.

  2. Ultimately, neither man could prevent the Trail of Tears, depicted in this 1942 painting. Of the 16,000 Cherokees who set out for what is now Oklahoma, 4,000 died. Granger Collection, New York

  3. President Andrew Jackson ignored the Supreme Court decision, enforced his Indian Removal Act of 1830, and pushed through the Treaty of New Echota. In 1838 Cherokee people were forcibly taken from their homes, incarcerated in stockades, forced to walk more than a thousand miles, and removed to Indian Territory, now Oklahoma.

  4. The infographic’s central visual is a map showing the routes of the Trail of Tears in 1838–39. It was by these routes that some 15,000 Cherokee were to set out for the West. Of that number, it is thought that about 4,000 died, having succumbed to hunger, exhaustion, cold, or disease, whether in removal camps in the East, on the westward ...

  5. 30 de abr. de 2019 · In 1987 the Trail of Tears National Historic Trail was established to commemorate the tragic episode. In 2009 continuing research was recognized, and the designated area now stretches approximately 5,045 miles (8,120 km) with sections in nine states. The Trail of Tears refers to the forced relocation of indigenous people from the Eastern United ...

  6. El Sendero de Lágrimas (en inglés, Trail of Tears) fue una serie de desplazamientos forzados de aproximadamente 60 000 nativos americanos de las denominadas Cinco Tribus Civilizadas entre 1830 y 1850 por parte del gobierno de Estados Unidos. 1 Esta limpieza étnica, que formaba parte de la expulsión de los nativos, fue gradual y se produjo ...

  7. The Trail of Tears was the result of Andrew Jackson’s policy of Indian Removal in the Southeastern United States. While Jackson’s designs on Indian territory east of the Mississippi River involved Indian nations such as the Cherokees, Seminoles, Chickasaws, Choctaws, and Creeks, as well as others from approximately 1814 until 1840, "the ...