Adventure Outdoors Magazine Summer 2017 | Page 18

TRAIL OF TEARS The Trail of Tears was a terrible event that led to the mistreatment, torture, and death of many Na- tive Americans that claimed land east of the Mis- sissippi River. President Andrew Jackson sought to relocate all of the Indians in Florida, Georgia, Tennessee, North Carolina, and Alabama, and even referred to this process as “Indian re- moval.” Many tribes were forced out of their lands, to walk what became known as the Trail of Tears. Hundreds of lives were lost and most suffered during the journey west. Today, the Trail of Tears National Historic Trail is owned and protected by the National Park Serv- ice. You can walk the original trail and commem- orate the survival of the tribes that had to endure this great suffering. Because the trail spans over nearly 1,000 miles, it crosses through almost a dozen present-day states, including North Car- olina, Georgia, Tennessee, Illinois, Missouri, Ala- bama, Kentucky, Arkansas, and Oklahoma. The National Park Service provides outlets for finding sites to visit along the trail, as well as dif- ferent things to do to learn about and honor the history of the Native American people. Visit their website for more information on interactive ex- hibits, tours, historic buildings, trail segments, and more. TRAIL OF TEARS Whether you’re looking to spend a weekend visiting the battlefields etched in America’s lands and history, or you’re wanting to reunite with the ancestors of earlier times, these historical land- marks and sites will have you pondering over past times with nostalgia. Take a journey to one or all of these places, and rediscover some of the main events that stitched our nation’s histor- ical timeline into our modern-day heritage. “Today, the Trail of Tears National Historic Trail is owned and protected by the National Park Service.”