Cherokee Pros And Cons

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In the nineteenth century, the Cherokee shifted from a tribal government to a republic based on that of the United States. In 1931, after an absence of sixteen years, Luther Standing Bear returned to the Pine Ridge Sioux Reservation in South Dakota. About four thousand Cherokee died due to starvation, disease, and exposure. Paleo-Indians were large game hunting Indian peoples whose cultures predate the adoption of horticulture and the bow and arrow. Because of the large game animals' extinction, for the next seven or eight thousand years, Native Americans hunted smaller game, fished, and foraged for wild plant foods. Yet the available documents consistently attest that European disease rapidly spread throughout the Native American groups. …show more content…

Between the 1730s and 1760s they were decimated by several waves of smallpox that eventually reduced their tribe by half. By 1820 the Cherokee had abandoned the tribal structure of their government and replaced it with a representative republic made up of executive, legislative, and judicial branches. In 1830 Georgia passed a series of laws that denied Cherokee their rights, with the intention of driving the Cherokee from their tribal lands. In 1906 the United States government dissolved the government of the Cherokee Nation in preparation for Oklahoma being granted statehood, and the following year, when Oklahoma became a state, the Cherokee became U.S.

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