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“Here at Blythe Ferry is where 9,000 Cherokee crossed the Tennessee River,” he said. “That’s why this is a special place. That’s why it is appropriate the Cherokee Removal Memorial is here.”
1 posted on 03/07/2008 11:21:33 AM PST by Tennessee Nana
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To: Tennessee Nana
"“Building this is just, and it is right,” he said.

Amen

2 posted on 03/07/2008 11:26:49 AM PST by Artemis Webb
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To: Tennessee Nana
I don't mind admitting that our country has made some serious mistakes in the past.
I don't mind memorials telling people about our serious mistakes.
I believe in being vigilant so that our country does not make serious mistakes in the future.

But I do look forward to a day when our face is not constantly rubbed in it. Will that day ever come?

3 posted on 03/07/2008 11:28:45 AM PST by ClearCase_guy
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To: Tennessee Nana

Cherokee history is fascinating stuff. They were nothing like the indians of Hollywood’s imaginings.


6 posted on 03/07/2008 11:37:46 AM PST by marron
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To: Tennessee Nana

The real Trail of Tears is the stretch of 82nd Street from I-69 to Keystone Avenue on the Northside of Indianapolis.


8 posted on 03/07/2008 11:51:09 AM PST by InvisibleChurch (" Nobody likes weepy meat." -- Mayor Quimby)
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To: Tennessee Nana
My wife's paternal grandmother was an orphan Cherokee indian girl named Mary Jane Pheasant. She made the journey on the Trail of Tears. Her parents didn't survive it. Her father grew up in La Cygne, KS.
13 posted on 03/07/2008 12:11:16 PM PST by Myrddin
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To: Tennessee Nana

Andy Jackson was a Democrat federalist and one of our worst presidents.


14 posted on 03/07/2008 12:11:28 PM PST by DFG
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To: Tennessee Nana

I believe in honoring people that had blended with the European society, and then were forced to leave, because others wanted their land.

However, I do not believe in another government grant. This is OUR money being spent frivolously.

Give US our money back and let us contribute to the memorial, if WE want to.


21 posted on 03/07/2008 12:44:34 PM PST by wizr ("Give me liberty, or give me death." - Patrick Henry)
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To: Tennessee Nana

There should be a memorial for this.


29 posted on 03/07/2008 2:50:12 PM PST by Jedi Master Pikachu ( What is your take on Acts 15:20 (abstaining from blood) about eating meat? Could you freepmail?)
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To: Tennessee Nana

Thanks for posting this, Nana. I’m glad to see the memorial. I do hope the taxpayers aren’t paying for it, I was afraid to look. This hits on what I’m doing when I’m not around. Much of the Trail of tears is covered in the book I’m STILL working on....

Many of the Cherokees didn’t leave primative homes. Let me give you one instance.

Elias Boudinot, son of OOWatee and brother of Stand Watie , had been educated at a school established by the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions at Cornwall, Connecticut. Here he took the name of a rich colonial benefactor, a citizen of New Jersey and a friend of George Washington who had served as the tenth president of the Continental Congress.

Elias married a white woman, Harriet Gold from Connecticut, much to the dismay of her cultured neighbors and family of New England. They settled along the Coo-sa-wa-tee River near New Echota, the Capitol of the Cherokee Nation, among other Deer Clan families such as Bell, Adair, Lynch, Vann, Starr, Ridge.

After some time had passed, Benjamin Gold, Harriet’s father traveled to the ‘wilderness’ to look in on his daughter living among the savages. On the 8th of December, 1829, he wrote from New Echota to his brother in New England describing his daughter’s home.

“She has a large and convenient framed house, two story, 60 by 40 ft. on the ground, well done off and well furnished with comforts of life. They get their supplies of clothes and groceries—they have their year’s store of teas, clothes, paper, ink, etc.,—from Boston, and their sugars, molasses, etc., from Augusta; they have two or three barrels of flour on hand at once.

This neighborhood is truly an interesting and pleasant place; the ground is smooth and level as a floor—the centre of the Nation—a new place laid out in city form, —one hundred lots, one acre each—a spring called the public spring, about twice as large as our saw-mill brook, near the centre, with other springs on the plat; six framed houses in sight, besides a Council House, Court House, printing office, and four stores all in sight of Boudinot’s house.”

Elias was the brother of Confederate Brigadere General Stand Watie.

A photo of his home (& others) in New Echota, before removal to Indian Territory West is here:
http://digital.library.okstate.edu/Chronicles/v011/v011p0927.html

Boudinot, the Ridges went ahead to Indian Territory West in 1837 and established trade centers at Honey Springs to meet the arriving 13,000 Cherokee refugees from the Trail of Tears.


42 posted on 03/07/2008 3:45:13 PM PST by AuntB ('If there must be trouble let it be in my day, that my child may have peace." T. Paine)
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