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Cherokee Removal : A Brief History with Documents by Theda Perdue and Michael Green (2016, Trade Paperback)

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Product Identifiers

PublisherBedford/Saint Martin's
ISBN-101319049028
ISBN-139781319049027
eBay Product ID (ePID)219437899

Product Key Features

Number of Pages224 Pages
LanguageEnglish
Publication NameCherokee Removal : a Brief History with Documents
SubjectEthnic Studies / Native American Studies, United States / General
Publication Year2016
TypeTextbook
Subject AreaSocial Science, History
AuthorTheda Perdue, Michael Green
FormatTrade Paperback

Dimensions

Item Height0.3 in
Item Weight8.1 Oz
Item Length8.2 in
Item Width5.5 in

Additional Product Features

Edition Number3
Intended AudienceCollege Audience
LCCN2017-302147
TitleLeadingThe
Dewey Edition23
IllustratedYes
Dewey Decimal973.5/7
Table Of ContentForeword Preface Illustrations Part One Introduction: The Cherokees and U.S. Indian Policy The Cherokee People Early Contact with British Colonists The United States Civilization Program Cherokee Culture Change Pressure for Removal Cherokee Resistance and Capitulation Part Two The Documents 1. 1. Cherokee Civilization Becoming Civilized 1. Young Wolf, Last Will and Testament, 1814 2. Cherokee Committee, Ruling on Young Wolf''s Estate, 1824 A Cherokee View of Civilization 3. John Ridge, Letter to Albert Gallatin, February 27, 1826 Christian Missions 4. Elizabeth Taylor, Letter to Miss Abigail Parker, June 26, 1828 5. Sally M. Reece, Letter to Reverend Daniel Campbell, July 25, 1828 6. Nancy Reece, Letter to Reverend Fayette Shepherd, December 25, 1828 Quantifying Cherokee Civilization 7. The Census of 1835 Who is Indian? 8. Major Ridge (1771?-1839) 9. John Ross (1790-1866) The Cherokee Constitution of 1827 10. Constitution of the Cherokee Nation, Formed by a Convention of Delegates from the Several Districts, at New Echota, July 1827 2. 2. Georgia Policy The Georgia Laws 11. Georgia State Assembly, Laws Extending Jurisdiction over the Cherokees, December 19, 1829, and December 22, 1830 Georgia and the Supreme Court 12. United States Supreme Court, Worcester v. Georgia, March 1832 Dispossessing the Cherokees 13. Memorial of Protest of the Cherokee Nation, June 22, 1836 White Intruders 14. Zillah Haynie Brandon, Memoir, 1830-1838 3. 3. United States Policy In Defense of the Cherokees: The William Penn Essays 15. William Penn [Jeremiah Evarts], A Brief View of the Present Relations between the Government and People of the United States and the Indians within Our National Limits, November 1829 American Women Organize against Removal 16. Catherine Beecher, Circular, Addressed to Benevolent Ladies of the U. States, December 25, 1829 Lewis Cass Justifies Removal 17. Lewis Cass, Removal of the Indians, January 1830 Congress Acts 18. United States Congress, Indian Removal Act, May 28, 1830 Andrew Jackson Applauds the Removal Act 19. Andrew Jackson, State of the Union Address, December 6, 1830 4. 4. The Cherokee Debate Women and Removal 20. Cherokee Women, Petition, May 2, 1817 21. Cherokee Women, Petition, June 30, 1818 22. Cherokee Women, Petition, October 17, 1821 [1831?] Elias Boudinot''s Editorials in the Cherokee Phoenix 23. Elias Boudinot, Editorials in the Cherokee Phoenix, 1829, 1831 The Treaty of New Echota 24. Treaty with the Cherokees, 1835 The Opposition Continues 25. John Ross, Letter in Answer to Inquiries from a Friend, July 2, 1836 The Treaty Party''s Defense 26. Elias Boudinot, Letters and Other Papers Relating to Cherokee Affairs: Being a Reply to Sundry Publications by John Ross, 1837 5. 5. The Trail of Tears Enrollment 27. Memorial of Protest of the Cherokee Nation, June 22, 1836 Forced Removal 28. Evan Jones, Letters, May-December 1838 Waiting to Cross the Mississippi 29. George Hicks, Letter from the Trail of Tears, January 13, 1839 The Aftermath 30. The Cherokee War, August 21, 183931. John Ridge, August 2, 1839 Rebuilding the Cherokee Nation 32. Ethan Allen Hitchcock, Journal, 1841\ 6. Remembering the Trail of Tears Oral History 33. Rebecca Neugin, Recollections of Removal, 193234. Interview with Eliza Whitmire, 1936 Marking the Trail of Tears 35. Chief Vann House, 195436. Chief Vann House Historic Site37. Vann House, Spring Place Georgia Commemorating Removal 38. Will Chavez, Three Trail of Tears Survivors Honored at April 18 Ceremonies, April 24, 2015 APPENDIXES Chronology of the Cherokee Removal (c. 1700-2007) Questions for ConsiderationSelected Bibliography Index
SynopsisCombining documents that share viewpoints of the Cherokee and white citizens with those pertaining to government policy, Cherokee Removal present a multifaceted account of this complicated moment in American history.
LC Classification NumberE99.C5P43 2016