American Minute with Bill Federer Feds forced 17,000 from homes, TRAIL OF TEARS-marched them to Oklahoma!

American Minute with Bill Federer
Feds forced 17,000 from homes, TRAIL OF TEARS-marched them to Oklahoma!
We The Kids

Gold had been discovered in Georgia in 1828, resulting in a Democrat-controlled Congress rushing through the Indian Removal Act, which passed by a single vote in 1830.

We The Kids
It was signed by Democrat President Andrew Jackson and carried out by Democrat President Martin Van Buren.

We The Kids

Though unauthorized by the Tribe, prominent Cherokees John Ridge and Elias Boudinot felt Indian removal was inevitable and negotiated with Washington politicians to sign the Treaty of New Echota of 1835.

We The Kids

Elias Boudinot was publisher of the Cherokee Phoenix – the first newspaper published by an American Indian tribe.

He wrote in editorials that the removal was unavoidable.

We The Kids

Indian removal was opposed by the Scot-Cherokee Chief John Ross, founder of Ross’ Landing in Tennessee, which was later renamed “Chattanooga.”

Over 12,000 Cherokees signed a petition in protest of the Indian Removal Act.

We The Kids
Condemning the Federal Government’s over-reaching mandate were members of the National Republican Party and the Whig Party, including:

-Rep. Abraham Lincoln (IL);
-Senator Henry Clay (KY);
-Senator Daniel Webster (MA); and
-Senator Theodore Frelinghuysen (NJ).

We The Kids

Tennessee Congressmen Davy Crockett was also opposed the Indian Removal Act.

He gave an impassioned speech in defense of the Indians.
We The Kids

Cherokee were largely Christian.

The had their own language, and their own alphabet, which was created in 1821 by Cherokee silversmith Sequoyah.

We The Kids

Christian missionaries, such as Jeremiah Evarts, led resistance to the Federal Government’s removal of the Indians, with many missionaries being arrested by the State of Georgia and sentenced to years of hard labor.

We The Kids

Christian missionaries Samuel Worcester and Elizur Butler were arrested for their opposition to Indian removal and their case went to the U.S. Supreme Court.

We The Kids

Chief Justice John Marshall ruled in favor of the Cherokee in Worcester v. Georgia (1832), writing that the Cherokee Nation was a “distinct community” with their own self-government “in which the laws of Georgia can have no force.”

We The Kids

In defense of the Indians, Supreme Court Justice Joseph Story wrote March 4, 1832:

“Thanks be to God, the Court can wash their hands clean of the iniquity of oppressing the Indians and disregarding their rights.”

We The Kids

Noting that the Supreme Court had no power to enforce its opinions, but had to rely on the President to actually implement them, Democrat President Jackson was attributed with saying:

“John Marshall has made his decision; now let him enforce it!”

We The Kids
American Minute – Notable Events of American Significance Remembered on the Date They Occurred

We The Kids
Choctaw Indian leader George W. Harkins wrote a Farewell to the American People, 1831:

“Having determined to emigrate west of the Mississippi river this fall, I have thought proper in bidding you farewell…
We The Kids

…We as Choctaws rather chose to suffer and be free, than live under the degrading influence of laws, which our voice could not be heard in their formation.”

We The Kids

Alexis de Tocqueville, the French philosopher, witnessed the Choctaw removals while in Memphis, Tennessee, in 1831, writing:

“In the whole scene there was an air of ruin and destruction, something which betrayed a final and irrevocable adieu; one couldn’t watch without feeling one’s heart wrung.

The Indians were tranquil, but sombre and taciturn. There was one who could speak English and of whom I asked why the Chactas were leaving their country. ‘To be free,’ he answered.”

We The Kids

General John E. Wool had sympathy for the Indians and hesitated carrying out the inhumane removal, resulting in Democrat President Martin Van Buren replacing him with General Winfield Scott.

We The Kids

46,000 Indians were removed by 1837.

Then came the freezing weather of 1838-1839.

We The Kids

The last 17,000 Cherokee Indians were forcibly removed by the Federal Government from Georgia, Tennessee, Alabama, and South Carolina to the Oklahoma territory.

We The Kids

Samuel Carter wrote in Cherokee Sunset: A Nation Betrayed: A Narrative of Travail and Triumph, Persecution and Exile, First Edition (Doubleday, 1976):

We The Kids

“Then … there came the reign of terror.

From the jagged-walled stockades the troops fanned out across the Nation, invading every hamlet, every cabin, rooting out the inhabitants at bayonet point.

The Cherokees hardly had time to realize what was happening as they were prodded like so many sheep toward the concentration camps, threatened with knives and pistols, beaten with rifle butts if they resisted.”

We The Kids

Christians ministered to the Indians along the trail, bringing them food and blankets.

Not able give their dead a full burial, they simply sang Amazing Grace, resulting in that song being considered as a “Cherokee National Anthem.”

We The Kids

President Ronald Reagan commemorated the estimated 5,000 who died from the Federal Government’s policy by designating the “Trail of Tears” a National Historic Trail in 1987.

We The Kids

 

Oklahoma, which is the Choctaw word for “red people,” became home to the Five Civilized Tribes: Chickasaw, Choctaw, Creek, Seminole, Cherokee; and other tribes who had been forcibly moved there.

We The Kids

The remaining territory opened for settlement with a gunshot at high noon on APRIL 22, 1889, beginning the famous Oklahoma Land Rush.

Within 9 hours some two million acres became the private property of settlers who staked their claims for 160 acres to homestead.

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Riding as fast as they could, many found desirable plots already taken by “Boomers” who began intruding ten years earlier, and “Sooners,” individuals who entered the territory just days or hours sooner than was permitted.

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In 1859, Lewis Ross, a brother of Cherokee Chief John Ross, was drilling for saltwater-brine to use as a food preservative and found a pocket of oil that produced ten barrels of oil a day for nearly a year.

We The Kids

In 1890, near the town Chelsea, Rogers County, Oklahoma, Edward Byrd drilled and found oil at a depth of only 36 feet, but was hampered by severe government regulations.

We The Kids

In 1897, the well “Nellie Johnstone No. 1” was drilled in Bartlesville, Oklahoma, and struck oil at 1,320 feet, beginning the Oklahoma Oil Boom.

Oil production rose quickly and impetus grew for Oklahoma to become the 46th State in 1907.

We The Kids

Within 10 years, Oklahoma became the largest oil-producing entity in the world.

We The Kids


The oil industry saved the whale from extinction
, as prior to petroleum fossil fuel, the major source of oil was from whaling ships, which killed whales for their blubber from which oil was extracted.

We The Kids

Oklahoma remained the leading oil producing State into the 1920’s, hitting its peak in 1930.

We The Kids
In 1938, Rockefeller’s Standard Oil of California struck oil in Saudi Arabia.

This began a shift in world politics as Saudi Arabia used it new wealth to become the main sponsor of extremist Wahhabi Islam worldwide.

We The Kids

Due to technological innovations in extracting oil, Oklahoma rebounded again as a major producers till Saudi Arab began to flood the market with inexpensive oil.

The Preamble of the Oklahoma State Constitution states:

Invoking the guidance of Almighty God, in order to secure and perpetuate the blessing of liberty; to secure just and rightful government; to promote our mutual welfare and happiness, we, the people of the State of Oklahoma, do ordain and establish this Constitution.”

We The Kids

America’s God and Country

We The Kids

A Cherokee delegate to the Oklahoma State Constitutional Convention was Clement Rogers of Rogers County.

We The Kids

His son, William Penn Adair ‘Will’ Rogers became a popular 1920’s radio and movie star.

Will Rogers was offered the nomination to be Oklahoma’s Governor, but he declined.

We The Kids

 

Will Rogers stated:

“I don’t make jokes. I just watch the government and report the facts.”

We The Kids

“If you ever injected truth into politics you’d have no politics.”

“The income tax has made more liars out of the American people than golf has.”

We The Kids

“If we ever pass out as a great nation we ought to put on our tombstone ‘America died from a delusion that she had moral leadership.'”

We The Kids

With his cowboy philosopher wit, Will Rogers said:

“The Lord constituted everybody that no matter what color you are, you require the same amount of nourishment.”

We The Kids

Will Rogers remarked:

“Live in such a way that you would not be ashamed to sell your parrot to the town gossip.”

We The Kids

Will Rogers quipped:

“Lord, let me live until I die,”

and

“The trouble with our praying is, we just do it as a means of last resort.”

We The Kids American Minute – Notable Events of American Significance Remembered on the Date They Occurred

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