in which 4,000 Cherokee people died of cold, hunger, and disease on their way to the western lands. By 1837, the Jackson administration had removed 46,000 Native American people from their land ...
Cherokee Nation and the U.S. Department of the Interior are partnering to utilize film and media to help preserve and advance ...
How is the expansion of its Owasso campus ... center focused specifically on helping Native Americans join the entertainment industry." With the Cherokee Film Institute, the tribe and its ...
News' Isabel Flores goes to Owasso to find out more about the recently-launched Cherokee Film Institute and how it aims to ...
Principal Chief John Ross (Cherokee ... to remove Native people by force from their homelands east of the Mississippi to lands west of the Mississippi. It became for American Indians one of ...
It is incredibly dangerous that these district attorneys have … chosen to ignore the law … by seeking to prosecute criminal cases over which they do not have jurisdiction,” Cherokee Chief Chuck Hoskin ...
Cherokee Nation and the U.S. Department of the Interior partnered to help preserve and advance Native languages.
Michael John Witgren, Seeing Red: Indigenous Land, American Expansion ... Story of an Afro-Cherokee Family in Slavery and Freedom, (Oakland: University of California Press, 2015) Claudio Saunt, ...
Its artifacts include Cherokee Chief Tucquo ... losing its sovereignty to U.S. expansion, and the new form of sovereignty created by the Native American reservation system. “ ...