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Cherokee
in North Georgia
Cherokee Timeline
Concise timeline of the Cherokee in Georgia, from 1450 until 1838.
Cherokee
A brief overview of the Cherokee culture and society in the early 19th Century
History of the Cherokee in Georgia, Part I
From the initial contact with whites to the defeat of the Lower Towns in 1794
History of the Cherokee in Georgia, Part II
From George Washington ordering the introduction of technology in an attempt to "civilize" the Cherokee to the "Revolt of the Young Chiefs."
History of the Cherokee in Georgia, Part III
Tecumseh and the Creek Redsticks to the early nationalist government and the Creek Path conspiracy.
History of the Cherokee in Georgia, Part III
The Cherokee complete the formation of a national government, with a bicameral legislature and a Supreme Court. In 1827 they create a strong, central leader, a position held by John Ross until his death in 1866.
Battle of Hightower
The fierce Chickamauga Cherokee in pitted combat with future Tennessee governor John Sevier.
The Talking Leaves
Sequoyah's Talking Leaves make the Cherokee Nation literate almost overnight.
The Cherokee Phoenix
First newspaper of the Cherokee Nation had an interesting life, and contributed to today's New Echota in its death.
Land cessions of Native Americans in Georgia
From the first Creek cession in 1733 to the invasion of the Cherokee Nation by the state of Georgia and the federal government.
Cherokee Removal Forts
Before The Trail of Tears, the Cherokee were housed in these "forts" with little sanitation or food. More than one-third of the 4,000 deaths attributed to The Trail of Tears occured in these forts.
Trail of Tears
In one of the saddest episodes of our brief history, Georgians steal the Cherokee Nation.
Chieftains Trail
Highlights many of the Native American sites mentioned in the above articles.
New Echota State Park
Walk the streets of the first Capital of the Cherokee Nation. Visit the restored Vann's Tavern and Steven Worcester's house.
Chief Vann House
James Vann was a vile, intemperate, mixed-blood Cherokee who built the finest house in the Cherokee Nation shortly after start of the 19th Century
John Ross
The only elected leader of the Cherokee in North Georgia.
Major Ridge
Lead the Cherokee on the path to acculturation, only to betray them by signing the Treaty of New Echota in 1835.
Sequoyah
Invented the Cherokee alphabet
Samuel Austin Worcester
A white minister who lived and worked with Cherokee, Worcester was one of the defendents in the Supreme Court case that recognized the Cherokee Nation as soveriegn
Recommended reading
Books of interest on the Cherokee experience in the North Georgia mountains. Recommended by About North Georgia in association with Amazon.com



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