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Resource Database Search Methods - use two search engines, External (Google) & NW Internal - results may vary
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Google Search Engine - use as an alternative to NW Internal Search Engine.
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Resources: 5 listings
| Name and Description | Nation | Location |
- Cherokee History in Georgia
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Cherokee |
US - Southeast |
- Today, some argue, we are at the dawn of a new era, one that will change the core of our society. Instances of cultural change on a
societal level are rare in the history of the world. Europeans begin such a change in the 1400's, fueled by the ink of Gutenburg's printing
press. Yet no society makes a change comparable to the dramatic cultural shift that the Cherokee accomplish in North Georgia from
1794 to 1835.
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- Introduction to the Creek Nation
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Creek (Muskogee) |
US - Southeast |
- Prior to the early 18th Century, most of Georgia was home to Native
Americans belonging to a southeastern alliance known as the Creek
Confederacy. Today's Creek Nation, also known as the Muskogee,
were the major tribe in that alliance.
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- North Georgia History - Index
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US - Southeast |
- Early Indians - a look at the builders of the Etowah Indian Mounds / Hernando de Soto to James Oglethorpe / The American Revolution in Georgia / North Georgia, 1783-1828 / Pine Barrens Speculation and Yazoo Land Fraud / The Walton War (Georgia vs. North Carolina) / Creek Indians / A history of the Cherokee in North / Georgia, part I / A history of the Cherokee in North / Georgia, part II / The Cherokee / The Talking Leaves and The Cherokee Phoenix / Land cessions of Native Americans in Georgia / Gold Rush of 1828 / Trail of Tears / North Georgia before the Civil War / And lots more!
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- Northwest Georgia's Chieftains Trail
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Cherokee |
US - Southeast |
- The Chieftains Trail was designated by the 1988 Georgia General Assembly a state historic trail for the purpose of
preservation, promotion and commemoration of Northwest Georgia's Native American heritage. The Chieftains Trail guides
travelers to nine public sites representative of the Indian cultures which once thrived here in the foothills of the Appalachian
Mountains. These sites showcase the pre-historic, Cherokee and Creek cultures.
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- Trail of Tears
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Cherokee |
US - Southeast |
- Between 1790 and 1830 the population of Georgia increased six-fold. The western push of the settlers
created a problem. Georgians continued to take Native American lands and force them into the frontier.
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