Dark History - 8: The Trail of Tears: Not one, but many
Episode Date: August 18, 2021Too many Americans think the Trail of Tears was just some difficult nature walk. Like, one path that a bunch of Native Tribes hiked to get from point A to point B. In reality, it was a death march thr...ough wild forests and raging rivers. Native Americans had to battle the unforgiving summer sun, harsh winters, brutal diseases, food shortages and abuse from the American Military meant to guide and protect them. Partners for this episode include: Stitch Fix, Apostrophe, Best Fiends, and ZipRecruiter.
Transcript
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Hi friends, how are you today?
I hope you're having a wonderful day so far.
My name is Bailey Sarian and this is the Dark History Podcast.
Welcome my friends.
Come on this journey with me, let's learn something new, shall we?
Here in the Dark History Library, ain't it fun?
We've been learning so much so far. And today, let me tell you, we've got in the dark history library, ain't it fun? We've been learning so much so far.
And today, let me tell you, we've got quite the story.
So, remember when you take that $20 bill
out of your pocket at 7.11 and you buy your Doritos,
or like one of those four-day old hot dogs?
I mean, they smell pretty good.
I don't judge, Boo Bear.
Anyway, you get a look at the man with the big ol' forehead
on the bill and you're like Andrew Jackson. Is that you? Aren't you a bad guy? Yes, you
are correct. And remember, we already talked about Andrew Jackson being a
terrible person before his presidency in a previous episode. And if you listen
to or watch that one, I said that Andrew Jackson was the literal devil.
Well, I wasn't lying, and today we're going to further prove that this was true, okay?
I think it's surprising how many people don't know the full extent of the trail of tears.
I mean, honestly, I didn't, okay? And if you ask a lot of your friends or family, they probably
think it's just one straight path, or it was just one straight path, or something like the organ trail.
But for like Native Americans, it's not.
It was actually really horrible.
Well, that's cute, you think it's similar to the computer game we played in fifth grade
Bayley.
So much of Native American history in the United States is whitewashed to make it easier
to digest for children, but it really
doesn't do the whole story justice. Like, did you know that they put people in many concentration
camps before sending them on the trail? Or that this just didn't happen to the natives in the south?
This awful policy also destroyed tribes in the north. In total, this impacted around 88,000 people. And during their forced
relocation, they think, I mean, they don't even really know, but it's believed around
17,000 people died. Or how about that Andrew Jackson knew exactly what he was doing and
was getting the results he wanted. I'm telling you, this is an ugly one. So buckle in bitches.
Buckle in.
Now, before we get into how we got here,
you need to know that the trail of tears
isn't just one event.
This was a series of painful journeys
that involved a total of 20 different native tribes
being forced to relocate over thousands of miles
over the course of a decade. While the nations
in the north were mainly pushed into Kansas, five southern tribes traveled to what is present day
Oklahoma. It's with these five tribes we begin our story. Now it's often taught that the trail
of tears only relates to the removal of the Cherokee tribe, but the Choctaw, Seminoles, Chick-Saw, and
the Creeks have their own trail of tears.
Each of these nations have unique experiences of misery, violence, and pain, and even though
the story focuses primarily on Cherokee removal, it's important to know how terrible this
entire moment in history is.
So to understand how we got to this point,
you guys remember the first president of the United States.
I'm sure you were there, Mr. George Washington.
The guy we like literally named everything after.
Yeah, him, that guy.
Well, he had promised to the people
that he would take care of what was called at the time,
the Indian problem.
I didn't say this, that's what it was called.
His approach to dealing
with this quote-unquote problem was focused on protecting white settlements and not so
much the natives. Simple as that. Now during the 1800s, Native Americans were living all
over the United States, but the focus of this story is on the indigenous tribes living
in and around the south-eastern part of the country.
This upset white settlers because they saw the natives as alien people hogging this land.
They believed they deserved.
I, Frickin Rull.
George Washington presented the idea of trying to make natives as much like white people as possible.
And a way to accomplish that was by converting them to Christianity
and teaching them to read and speak English. You know, like we moved on to rakes and hose and the
natives were still playing seeds with their hands. Like in the colonist's eyes, the natives were
old school. I mean, they don't need to change damn things. Shit has been working for them forever.
And here come the colonists. I'll like, do it the way I do it or get out. Road. Road. The settlers wanted the natives
land so they could grow cotton and apply their European farming practices. Many native tribes
lived on fertile land and by the 1830s cotton was the United States number one export.
Colonizers basically wanted to create a uniquely American civilization and honestly erase
the America that already existed.
They wanted a blank slate and since they defeated the British, they felt that they were owed
this land and deserve to create their own. But the natives were not giving it up.
They were not budging, and this was frustrating to the white people who the natives called
get this, squatters.
Because honestly that's what they were, squatters.
Back then, a big priority of the colonizers was expanding the nation from sea to shining sea.
It was a nation wanting to move forward
and in their minds the natives were stuck in the stone ages.
They shared the land, but the settlers were obsessed
with private property.
This is mine, give me.
You know? It's kind of like when a kid goes through that
mine, mine, mine, stage when they're like three
and they're like, mine, mine, mine, mine, mine, mine, mine, mine, mine, mine, you know.
Dude, shut up. This is mine. It's like that. I guess white people just act like three and they're like, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, my, wanted it. And as a nation, they were trying to build an identity at all cost. And that
meant having a lot of land and resources. But again, the natives didn't want to leave,
because they didn't need a leave, right? So the white people, they're like, hey, we need
someone who's willing to roll up their sleeves and commit some truly horrible atrocities
to get them to leave. And who better than Knock Knock Bitch, who's there?
Andrew Bassalls Jackson.
Of course he's going to come to this party.
No one invited you, Andrew.
Well actually, that's a lie, but still.
Ugh.
Now at this time, Andrew Jackson was a major part of making the trail of tears happen.
And as you can guess, he didn't really like the Native Americans.
Now if you listen to the Andrew Jackson episode, then it shouldn't be a surprise to you that Andrew was
not afraid to get rid of anything standing in his way. He figured out that if you kick Native Americans off their land,
you get to just take it. He's like, wow, I found this life hack
Andrew did this and got Florida. He did this and got parts of Alabama and Georgia He even got a freaking baby in the title of war hero out of it
But he especially hated Native Americans because he had a personal vendetta against them
You see his brother was killed by the British in the Revolutionary War and the natives were working
with the British in the North. So, in Andrew's eyes, a friend of my enemy is my enemy.
Like sure, okay. That's why when he was running for president, many looked to Andrew Jackson to
take America to the next level. So I'm sure at home you're aware when a person is running for president,
they come with their laundry list of talking points to present to the American people
in hopes to get the votes, you know. For example, like Nixon was going to bring law and order,
Reagan was going to win the war on drugs, Trump was going to build his wall, and Andrew Jackson,
he was going to get rid of the natives. Great, super normal day.
And it was a promise that like everyone agreed would be best for America, I guess.
So these presidents have, you know, their talking points. And rarely do they actually achieve what they promise.
Like with Andrew, he talked a big game, but very little actually happened. He tried.
But he did do something so disturbingly on
brand during his first term as president. He signed something legit called the
Indian Removal Act. Yeah, they just came right out and said it, which got the
American people super jazzed. They're like Indian removal act, sign me up, and
it's exactly what it sounds like. A law signed by Andrew Jackson to remove the Native Americans from their land, and
there was nothing they could do about it.
This became priority number one for slimy old Andrew.
He needs better hobbies, honestly.
Now Andrew Jackson claimed this was for Native Americans own good. I'm rolling my eyes if you cannot see right now watch.
I'm rolling my eyes because, ah, sharp.
His strategy was to take their land through contracts and treaties and then tell them,
hey, like, you should have more land, but not this land.
There's more land like out west, it's called Oklahoma.
And we saved it for you guys,'s just for you that's your land
over there man so he will keep taking more of their land and kept giving them other land further
away of course further own good which this was obviously all bullshit and if it was confusing to
you that was the point Andrew Jackson want to make things confusing. Really cool guys, this is easily the top 10 least
Joe things done in all of American history.
The language in this law says it's supposed to be voluntary
that both parties would have to agree to it.
And out of the deal, the Native Americans
were supposed to get like some cool shit,
like money and assistance moving.
I don't know.
I'm not looking at the exact definition,
but they were supposed to get cool shit out of it.
So the Native Americans were like,
oh, it's voluntary.
No, thank you.
We're going to stay here.
We're good.
No, no, like, because it's voluntary.
So they don't have to leave if they don't want to.
And then the government was thinking like,
oh, shit, this is going to be a problem for us.
This is a side, no? Okay. But it reminds me of this time I was on the
cheer team in high school. Yeah, I was on a cheer team. I know it might be hard to imagine
that I was like, yay, one, two, three. But there was this time when the cheer coach was asking
for mandatory donations for the squad to pay for, I don't know. She said like cheer related stuff,
but nobody really knows what it was for.
What we do know is that she drove the coach.
She drove some like nice ass cars, okay?
But it was real so spish,
because isn't mandatory donation technically
an oxymoron, you know?
But here's the kicker.
If you didn't donate to this mandatory donation, then you would be kicked off.
Well, someone ratted on her.
It was my mom.
And turns out what she was doing was totally illegal.
And I believe she got fired, but the point is, if something is voluntary, then it really
should be voluntary, right?
Like you would think that, right?
Okay, enough about my cheerleading nonsense. Let's pause for an ad break really quick. BRB.
Hi. So now a line in the sand was drawn. Native Americans were doubting Jackson's removal act
idea. Since he made it voluntary, and they obviously didn't volunteer to walk 1,000 miles,
they were like, yeah, fuck off, dude.
You know, like this is our land, this is our home.
No, we're good.
So now Andrew is in the hot sea and needs to do something.
So Andrew's like, hold my beer and my bath salts.
And he set his sights on the Chakta tribe.
Now white people at this time,
they didn't hate Chaktaas as much as they disliked
other Native Americans
because Chalktaws had fought alongside them in the War of 1812, so they were fighting side-by-side
together on the same team. Now the Chalktaws, they signed a deal with the government that offered
a huge plot of land in Oklahoma, in trade for their land in Mississippi, right? Okay, and in 1831, the Choctaw became the first nation
to be kicked out of their land altogether,
which is fucked up because, again,
they're fighting alongside the white people, right?
Like they had their back, how come no one had their back?
You get it.
Now, they made the journey to Oklahoma
on foot with no food, no supplies,
and really no other help from the government. Thousands of people died along the way.
One Choctaw leader told a newspaper that it was a trail of tears and death. All this is where
the name for the story came from. It was the first time we hear the name, Trail of Tears.
It's such a sad name.
Today, the Choctaw calls this event removals
because of how closely the name Trail of Tears
is tied to the Cherokee removal.
And the important thing here is that the Choctaw,
they were the first group to relocate.
Now remember, they had a pretty okay relationship
with the white people, and even then they still got freaking screwed over. So other tribes
saw how they were treated, and were like, no, we can't trust anything you say, and we're
just not going to go. So next up are the seminoles. Now, they were extremely bad ass, honestly.
And after the way the Choakhtas were treated,
they weren't gonna fall for any of the United States government shenanigans.
Remember in the Andrew Jackson episode, when he wanted to take Florida,
and he went after some Native Americans who were housing former slaves?
Well, if you don't remember, that's what was going on.
Well, that was a Seminole's, and they didn't actually leave Florida after that.
Now that Andrew wants them to move again, this time they're prepared. Well, that was a Seminole's and they didn't actually leave Florida after that.
Now that Andrew wants them to move again, this time they're prepared, okay?
They're ready to fight for it and basically take the United States army to war.
In this war, they were cutty and used all sorts of like guerrilla tactics and even had
formally enslaved people fighting alongside them.
The war ended up costing Andrew Jackson like $40 million, which is way more than he ever
wanted to spend on this shit, so you know he was pissed.
He hates losing.
But the Seminole's, they fought for like 13 years, three wars, and just kept getting
screwed over by the government to the point that, well, they were just tired. Eventually the United States
government let them keep some of their land in Florida around the Everglades, and then there were
others who took payment and headed off to Oklahoma. So next up, the Creeks. Now they did not want to leave
their land. Well, correction, none of them wanted to leave, but the creeks really were like, nay, no, no, you are not taking this land. And if you remember, they already lost a
huge portion of their land when Andrew Jackson attacked them around like 1814
before he was even president. Remember my Andrew Jackson episode when he was
like going around cutting off their noses and like he stole a baby, that was this.
Anyway, they didn't wanna leave
because this is where they live.
This is where their ancestors are buried.
This is their home.
So they came to an agreement with the United States government
signed some documents where the United States government
was like, okay fine, we'll protect your land,
but only if you give us some of it first.
That's already a little suspicious.
You know, like that logic makes not a lot of sense, but okay.
Well, guess what the United States did.
Not protect their land, of course.
Why would they?
Not very reliable, are they?
Colonizers cheated them out of it, and the government didn't nothing to stop it.
So the Greeks are their pissed, obviously,
and running out of options
since the agreements they signed
were not really in their favor to begin with.
So they would do things like steal livestock
and burn down the farms of white people
who honestly deserved it.
In my personal opinion.
Now the government wants to step in, but it's to forcibly remove the remaining creeks.
15,000 Creek Nation people would migrate in 1837 to what the United States government
called Indian Territory or what we know today as maybe you guessed it.
Oh, Oklahoma.
I know what you're thinking. Why Oklahoma? Because I was
thinking the same thing. Why did they choose Oklahoma? You see, the United States, they had
the land, but it wasn't land the country was doing anything with, like at this time.
It was just kind of there. It was essentially with the government considered leftovers.
So they're like, here, take that. Bye.
Then we have the Chick-Stone.
Now they saw everything a bit differently
than the other tribes.
Instead of digging their heels and insane,
like, we must defend our homeland.
Don't get me wrong.
They wanted to defend our homeland.
But they chose to come to an agreement in 1832,
knowing what could come if they didn't.
So they're trying to think ahead.
That's where they signed the agreement. So they took the payment and they left their native land
in 1837. So the chick saw relocate to Oklahoma two, which then leads us to the Cherokee.
Let's first pause for a word from our sponsor. I know ad breaks are annoying, but
the electric welcome back. So let's try to remember
that this isn't just about the people moving to a new place. This isn't like when your
sister moved to New York City for six months. Like we all want to work in fashion when we're
21, Gina, you're not special, you know? Not only did these people have to walk, walk to
Oklahoma, they had to give up their homeland.
This wasn't just about losing homes.
This wasn't just about losing land.
This wasn't about losing money.
Honestly, they probably didn't give a rat's ass about American money at all.
It probably meant nothing to them, right?
I mean, just like how they viewed the land differently than the colonizers.
They had been fine without Western money for generations, right? This was about the potential for them to lose their souls,
their spirituality, their identity, and their freaking future. This is something all
the tribes had to deal with. Before everything went down, the Cherokee many years
before came to an agreement with the United States that their land in Georgia
belonged to them, the tribe.
Well, that upset Andrew Jackson.
He wants that land and someone's telling him no.
We know how that goes.
You know how that goes.
Andrew said it was unconstitutional for natives to have their own land without the state
approving it.
And Georgia, they integrated this and they were not approving it. And Georgia, they integrated this,
and they were not approving this.
The option was for the Cherokees to give up their land,
or there was going to be problems.
There's going to be problems.
The Cherokee tribe state put on their lands
because it was their land, and they
came to a freaking agreement.
Around the time the Indian removal act was signed into law into a freaking agreement.
Around the time the Indian removal act was signed into law, over on Cherokee land,
somebody accidentally discovered some gold.
Great.
Great.
Well, Georgia state ended up passing a law.
Us white people are shady as fuck.
Okay. us white people are shady as fuck. Okay, because Georgia State ended up passing a law that said all gold, silver, and other
minds found within Georgia land were property of Georgia.
Even if it was on Cherokee land.
I'm telling you, when white dudes want something, they just freaking take it.
Rock and roll, I'm looking at you.
It only took two and a half weeks
for the Georgia government to step in
and seize the Cherokee's land.
Now that there was some precious gold found in the area,
there was much more urgency to like,
step in and snatch it up.
I don't care if your family lives here.
I just bought some flippy flops,
and I need like that gold for a cute toe ring.
Is what I imagine they're thinking probably.
Well, the Cherokee once again are not going to give up easy and took their case all the way
up to the Supreme Court. Basically, the court ruled that states couldn't make laws that
went against treaties with the natives and also that the federal government needed to make sure white intruders
stayed the hell out of native lands. It's not your place.
I mean, how could these people just come in and like all of a sudden tell them what to do?
It just, it may no damn sense.
The Supreme Court agreed and told Georgia they couldn't take Cherokee land.
Yay! You land. Yay!
You know?
Yay!
Now, if you've been listening and you are familiar with
Andrew Jackson at this point, I'm sure you're aware that he was not happy about this.
He was pissed right the fuck off.
So, what did you expect?
When the Supreme Court wouldn't let the United States have the Cherokees land, Andrew played dumb and pretended he knew nothing. No law was past or anything. He went against
the treaties and figured in a nation as big as the Cherokees, there has to be like a few of them
who are willing to negotiate. So Andrew reached out to about 500 tribe members and offered them a quote,
unquote, good deal. Money was offered to help relocate the tribe to Oklahoma.
They would compensate for any lost property on their journey or anything that got left behind.
And in trade, the United States would get all of their land.
Like, yay, you know, it sounds like a good offer.
Maybe, I don't know, for good.
But keep in mind, this should have never even happened, right?
The Supreme Court had already decided
that the Cherokees could keep their land
and didn't have to move in the first place.
But these 500 Cherokees within the tribe had a debate and decided to go ahead
and sign the deal with Andrew Jackson.
Not a good move, not a good move.
But I'm sure like they didn't have any bad intentions
with it, it's just, they knew, I think they knew
like trouble was a brew in.
I don't know, I can't speak for them,
but 500 of them signed it, you know?
The issue was that although they were members
of the Cherokee Nation,
they weren't leaders of the tribe,
so they weren't allowed to speak for the Cherokee Nation as a whole.
Like, who was the leader?
It was a guy named John Ross.
He was the principal chief,
and he did not sign the agreement.
It upset him so much when he found out others had signed it that he started
his own petition and protest of the deal. The principal chief was able to get 16,000
members of the Cherokee tribe to sign his petition. Can you imagine getting 16,000 signatures
on something before the internet? Before cars? I couldn't even get one customer to sign
up for a reward card when I worked at Best Buy.
So that's very impressive.
Anyway, Andrew didn't care.
He sees the signatures.
He's like, nah, don't care.
What's that?
No.
You know, and he just ignores it.
Sneaky as hell.
But once the treaty was signed and sealed with those original like 500 members who agreed
to it, it was a done deal,
and the land now belonged to the United States. Sad face because that's fucked up.
So the government gave the Cherokee two years to get the hell out, okay? And the government
promised them if they didn't leave the land, they were going to be removed by force.
So they were threatening them. Well, Sandra Jackson, Bayley, are you surprised?
No, I'm not.
Great talk we had.
Imagine how mad the rest of the tribe was when they found out they had two years to leave
when they just heard from the Supreme Court that they didn't have to leave at all.
So some of the Cherokee tribe are thinking like, hey, what happens if we wait until Andrew
Jackson isn't president anymore?
Like maybe this new president that comes in
will have our back and let us keep our land.
So they kind of waited out for a couple of years.
So the next president that came into office,
he was smart, skilled, and a very educated politician.
So they're thinking, yeah, you know, like,
yay, someone's gonna be on our side.
Someone has a freaking brain around here finally.
Now that's Mr. Martin Van Buren.
Even his name sounds like a Disney villain name, right?
He had no problem finishing what Andrew Jackson started.
And he did it all with the crickets smile on his face.
Ugh, boo.
Before we get into shithead Martin Van Buren,
let's, like I was saying, this new president,
Marty Van Buren comes in, okay? Before we get into Shithead Martin-Vamburin, like I was saying, this new president, Marty
Vamburin comes in.
At this time, the United States was experiencing a major financial crisis.
Because his policies totally sucked balls, Marty took out all of his built-up aggression
and anger on the natives.
It was like the one thing he felt like he could control.
Marty had a reputation for being super well dressed, but an asshole.
And you know, an asshole is still an asshole, even if it's dressed up in something fancy.
So okay, that means a lot.
Plus on top of that, he was short, like short short.
So I personally believe that he probably had an Napoleon complex, you know, little man,
big ego.
Seems to be a common theme during this time.
I don't know what happens when people get in that white house, but
well, I don't blame him. Your ego would probably get inflated in the white house.
Yeah.
But you have to murder a bunch of people.
No.
Anyways, so quickly after taking over office, Van Buren sent troops to the Cherokee Nation
to round up every member of the tribe and imprison them in what we now consider concentration
camps.
At the time they considered them holding camps to just like get them ready for their upcoming
journey, but really these places were horrific, okay?
Now, I tell you stories about murder and death every week on my
YouTube, you know? But let me tell you, this shit is about to get really dark.
Well, by the year 1838, 2000 Cherokee had voluntarily left and headed to Oklahoma, so they got
like a head start, I guess. I don't know. 16,000 Cherokee remained on their land.
The US government stepped in again,
this time sending 7,000 troops to force them out.
When the troops came in, they went into their homes
and threatened their lives if they didn't leave.
Parents or children returned home from work
or play to find their family had been kicked out.
In some cases, like dinner was still
on the table. They just kicked them out. They were not allowed to grab any of their belongings.
And as they left, white people came in and looted their homes. They were just like taking everything.
Because remember, this is new American land and white people were so eager to settle in it.
So they're just freaking vultures.
The remaining Cherokee on their land were sent to the holding camps.
The Cherokees were kept in such close quarters and under such intense guard that any ounce of privacy was
impossible and there were like no toilet facilities.
I mean, I'm sure like the least of their worries
is going party, you know, but could you imagine?
Everyone's just tight space.
I mean, what the fuck?
There were times when they had to line
naked on the ground, often exposed to the hot ass sun
and just freaking off all weather.
Many would end up passing away due to the brutal inhumane conditions.
About 2,000 Cherokee died from disease there, and again this was before they even headed
on their journey.
With nothing left, many of the Cherokee members began the march known as the Trail of Tears,
so they were heading to the Western lands on foot.
And it wasn't like a nature walk with the little path and it wrote markers.
This was pure roughing it. Over the next year, the Cherokee tribe would split up into smaller groups,
and since there wasn't just one path, the groups each took their own path to get to Oklahoma.
I'm doing like this with my hand movements if you're watching over on YouTube
because there were many different paths taken.
Some like took a long ass way, some went,
it just, it varied on what group you were in.
The average mileage one would walk in the summer
was around a thousand miles.
Again, on foot, a thousand miles on foot in summer.
My god. That's like walking from Los Angeles to Seattle or like Chicago to New Orleans or
Tennessee to Oklahoma because that's what they literally did. So as you've gathered, that's very far.
Yes. There were government troops with them that would follow, lead, and watch the Cherokee tribe
for about a third of their journey
to make sure that they were doing what they were supposed
to be doing.
Keeping them in check.
So they would travel about 10 miles per day
in a three mile long caravan of people.
Like, imagine if someone in the front has to stop for something, how do you even communicate
with one another 3 miles back?
How do you do that?
You know, I don't know, but they did it.
Some of the elderly and young people would ride in wagons.
Pretty much everyone else's was on foot.
It didn't matter if it was boiling hot, muddy, or snowy.
I mean, they didn't have a choice.
And remember, a lot of them didn't even have their belongings with them.
So let's talk about food, because it wasn't good.
They would mainly eat salted pork and flour,
and there wasn't enough of it,
so they had to find food as they went.
Sometimes people would venture off from the group
to go hunt for turkeys or deer,
which they would use to feed themselves,
but it wasn't always available.
People start, especially in the winter.
Did I mention that they went through
this like during both summer and winter?
It was a long-ass journey.
Even water was a challenge.
They'd have to dig it out of the snow and
ice. And the other water challenge was the rivers. The Mississippi River had to be crossed,
and rumor has it. It's not some kind of smooth calm river.
It's pretty treacherous. There's no paved roads, there's no bridges, just super deep and
unforgiving waters. And then all of your stuff is wet, half of the river is frozen in the winter and you're
like, okay, are we going to cross on the ice?
Can it hold us?
Are we swimming across?
What's going on?
And then you know once you're wet in a survival situation, that can be a huge problem.
And it definitely was for them.
It would lead to all sorts of diseases and any disease that showed up along the trail
would run rampant among everyone.
And these were diseases which are mostly preventable now, like dysentery,
measles, and whooping cough, but back then, in conditions like this, even a fever could just
kill you. These diseases killed so many people
that they had to bury their loved ones along the way.
On top of this, the soldiers that were supposed to protect
and guide them,
they were sexually abused in the Cherokee women.
Every possible bad thing that could happen
was happening on this death march.
Fucked off.
By 1839, the relocations finally came to an end. could happen was happening on this death march.
By 1839, the relocations finally came to an end.
The exact number of Cherokees that died on their journey honestly will never really be
known.
The most common number that people estimate is like around 4,000 people, which was about
25% of the entire Cherokee nation at the time.
Before we move on, let's pause for an ad.
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So the Cherokee tribe was assigned different areas in what we now know as Oklahoma, but back
then it was unsettled, just like open land.
The Cherokee tribe had to completely start from scratch. I mean schools, houses,
stores, or farmlands, literally everything to function as a society. Could you imagine walking
a thousand miles and it's like, okay, you're here, now build a house. You know what I found to be
very interesting? The first thing they built was a Supreme Court, which I thought was like,
what? Why? I don't know, I was just a genuine thought I had. What? Why? But then when you really think
about it, it's pretty smart, okay? Their Supreme Court would hopefully prevent them from getting
totally screwed over by the United States government again, like they literally had just been.
I take it as a power move. Some more shit happened when the United States government again. Like they literally had just been. I take it as a power move.
Some more shit happened when the United States decided
to make Oklahoma an official state,
aka repeat cycle, okay?
This meant that the native tribes no longer were in complete
control over the land.
They were once again promised.
But it wasn't like before where they just got kicked out.
It was just now they had the US government
as a closer neighbor.
But at least now they could still function
as their own government.
So where are all the tribes now?
Thousands upon thousands of native people
had died during these death marches on their journey west.
And when they arrived,
they managed to rebuild like the Cherokee. The United States had made promises to the
native people that they felt to keep. Actually, they didn't fail to keep them. They went
out of their way to break them. Not all of the native people in the southeast made the journey
on the trail of tears. There are still small groups of each tribe
in their original homeland, but the bulk of their land ownership was moved to Oklahoma.
These Oklahoma territories are still there today. They're occupied by the creeks,
seminals, chakta, chikasa, and Cherokee people, but that doesn't mean things are perfect,
like, it's all easy peasy for them and everything's improved and perfect.
The United States government still to this day looks for ways in which they can take more of their land.
I mean, just take a goddamn look at Mount Rushmore.
The Black Hills area where Mount Rushmore is was sacred to the Lakota and Cheyenne tribes,
then white people discovered golds in the region.
Right?
So the United States government came in, took their land,
worker crews came out, they put dynamite in the hill,
or with the mountain, and then they put white men on it.
Well, that a big middle finger, huh?
Thanks.
Even more recently, the Keystone pipeline in the Dakota's, Oh, that a big middle finger, huh? Thanks.
Even more recently, the Keystone Pipeline in the Dakota's.
South Dakota.
Native groups were pissed because it was cutting right through their land, and it posed as
a huge risk to the wildlife, which they needed to hunt for food, for drinking water, and
for their safety. Of course, big oil went for it anyway,
and just like the natives predicted, the pipe burst and made a huge oil spill only to have the
project canceled a couple of years later. So, all that destruction of nature for fricking nothing.
of nature for frickin' nothin'. Thanks.
All five removed tribes stand as successful sovereign nations,
proudly preserving cultural traditions
while adapting to the challenges of the 21st century.
The Cherokee removal in particular is considered
to be one of America's darkest moments in history.
In 1987, the United States Congress turned the trail
of tears into a
national historic trail that's over 2,200 miles and across nine different states.
Now get this, it's actually shorter than the trail the Native Americans had walked
because there's like stuff in the way now, but okay, you know, it wasn't until 2004,
2004, that the United States Senate offered a formal apology
for what had taken place during the trail of tears.
I'm not sure what to say to follow that, but, you know,
there's a through-line in this entire story.
They wanted to eradicate the Native Americans.
They chose Oklahoma because it was a hard place to live.
There was nothing there.
Jackson wanted a white nation.
The colonizers wanted more land to exploit.
Van Buren wanted to, I don't know, be a dick.
Want, want, want, want, want, want, want.
You know, just because you want something
as many freaking deserve it.
You know what the Native Americans wanted?
They probably just wanted to be left alone
to continue living on the land that they called home for centuries before Europeans ever
showed up. This isn't like our other episodes where we just tell you a story about an evil
company or something. This story was dark from the jump. I wanted to cover it because it's
easy to say like, oh yeah, that's super fucked up.
You know, but it's our job to like look this shit in the eye
and talk about what exactly went down.
Because the least we can do is remember their stories
and honor the real history behind it all.
So what's the conclusion here?
That sucks.
I think we can all agree, like that freaking sucks.
I don't know, America sucks, people suck.
Everything freaking sucks.
I'm laughing because it's uncomfortable.
It's hard to not focus on the evil and mistreatment and racism of the United States
government towards Native Americans.
But I think what's also important about this whole story is when you focus on the
resilience and strength of those who push through the awful tragedy,
but they manage to preserve their culture and traditions.
You know, you don't hear about genocides in America,
but this took place in our own country,
not somewhere like far away, you know,
and it's not being acknowledged in the right way.
Why don't you say?
America is so quick to point the finger,
but they say we, I'm gonna say we,
because I'm in America right now, great.
We can't seem to own our own shit, right?
The best way to give a big, middle, freaking finger
to Jackson, Van Buren, and all the colonizers is to persist.
For a while now, I've seen comments
on my murder mystery makeup videos asking if I could
please do a story about the trail of tears.
And let me tell you, let me tell you, I definitely tried so many different times because it's so
dense, it was really hard to make it fit into my Monday upload.
But this show is a different beast.
I mean, I don't really know what I'm doing here yet fully, but like, I think it's a different
beast.
I thought, hey, like, let's talk about it on this show, right?
Because at least here, I can give it a little bit more justice.
But again, there are a ton of layers to this story, and it's honestly really impossible
to tell the full thing in 45 minutes.
So I'm saying, I'm suggesting you should absolutely read more about this story on your own.
This is one of those um things that kind of gets glossed over in history class. Maybe they spend a day on it or so
and it really shouldn't be hell. I personally I don't think I even learned about this in school.
Or maybe I did I just need some drink drugs, But there was basically a genocide in our own backyard.
The president, who was honored on a $20 bill systematically removed thousands of Native
Americans, and we barely talk about it.
Yet the five tribes are all still around today.
They resisted removal.
They were not exterminated, and they persisted.
If you want to continue to learn more, like I do, here are some resources for you.
The National Museum of the American Indian, their mission is to foster a richer,
shared human experience through a more informed understanding of native people.
You can learn more on their website at americanindian.si.edu.
You can also learn more about the Cherokee Nation by visiting Cherokee.org. As always, I
will have additional resources linked in the show notes, but I want to hear your guys'
thoughts. So let's continue the conversation over on socials using the hashtag dark history.
Join me over on my YouTube where you can watch
these episodes on Thursday after the podcast airs and also catch my murder mystery and makeup
which drops on Mondays. Thank you guys so much for hanging out with me today. I hope maybe you
you learned something new, but other than that I hope you have a wonderful rest of your week. You make good choices and I'll be talking to you next week.
Bye!
Bye!
Dark History is an audio boom original.
The podcast is Executive Produced by Bailey Sarian, Chelsea Durgan from Slash Management,
and Ed Simpson from Wheelhouse DNA.
Producer Lexi Kiven, Dariel Kriston, and Spencer Strassmore, research provided by Elizabeth Hyman and Jed Bookout.
Writers, Jed Bookout, Michael Obersch, Joey Skavuzo,
and me, Bailey Sarian.
A big thank you to today's historical consultants,
Professor Jeff Osler from the University of Oregon,
and author of Surviving Genocide, native nations
and the United States from the American Revolution
to bleeding cancels, published by Yale University,
Press in 2019.
Dr. Michael Landis, Clay J. Johnson, and Bradley Wagnon,
author of How the World was Made and the Land of the Great
Turtles, available in both Cherokee
and English.
I'm your host, Princess of the Dark, I think, maybe not, I don't know, Bailey Sarian.