Wampanoag Indian Argumentative Essay

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The Cherokee nation was full of culture, successful agriculture, and a trusted community. This changed when the Europeans broke that trust with greed and dishonesty. The Cherokee land had many things that the intruders wanted, such as gold and crops. Not only did the Europeans become disloyal, but so did some of their own native blood. When Andrew Jackson passed the Indian Removal bill, even against the Supreme Court's decision, the tribe started to decline. Some became scared for their people, while others were going to stand their ground. A few of the ex-council members signed a contract stating that the US government could have their land. In exchange for protection on the move to their new home by Mississippi, new churches and schools, …show more content…

Some moved voluntarily, others would stay as long as they could, even if it meant they would die there. Three days after the removal date soldiers stormed into Cherokee land, forcing them out of their homes with only the clothes on their back and what they could carry. Many on the long journey became extremely ill and died in their tracks. The five men that made the brave decision to sign the contract would later be brutally beaten to death. The Cherokee lost many of their friends and family throughout those devastating months.
The Wampanoag Indians lived in the Massachusetts & Rhode island area. At one point there population was 12,000. Some of the Wampanoag chiefs were Squanto, Samoset, Metacomet,and Massasoit. They didn’t live in teepees nor longhouses, but wetus’s. They are domed shaped huts made of sticks and grass. The Wampanoags’ language has been extinct since the …show more content…

government taking the land.The Nez Perce lived in villages scattered near west of the Rocky Mountain. They owned the largest horse herd on the continent. What made them stand out was they lived without guns or ammunition; making the them easy targets to enemies. The hunters would cross over a treacherous mountain to hunt buffalo.
One day when three young boys spotted a cluster of men, now known as Captain William Clark, walking near the Nez Perce lodges. Quite frightened the boys hid but Clark found them and offered a ribbon, showing they were not there to harm. Nez perce were not frightened and treated them as there own people. Chief described him as “a cheerful man with apparent

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