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Cherokee Tragedy: The Story of the Ridge Family and of the Decimation of a People by Thurman Wilkins (Good, 1970, HC, 398 pages, The Macmillan Co.)

Cherokee Tragedy: The Story of the Ridge Family and of the Decimation of a People by Thurman Wilkins (Good, 1970, HC, 398 pages, The Macmillan Co.)

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Used in good condition: dust jacket has light wear and has been covered with cellophane wrapper; cover has very light wear; sticker on inside front page; pages have very light usage wear; inside is clean; all pages intact. LOC #73-92077

Beginning with the birth of the Cherokee patriarch Major Ridge in the 1770â s, Thurman Wilkins tells the events that led to the Trail of Tears, through the eyes of the illustrious Ridge family. Major Ridge and his Connecticut-educated son John were willing to abandon the rich tribal homelands in North Carolina, Tennessee, Alabama, and Georgia and emigrate west to the Indian Territory to escape the white invaders.

During the decades of fruitless negotiations that culminated in the infamous Treaty of New Echota, Georgia, in 1835, the Ridges and their relatives Elias Boudinot and Stand Watie became persuaded that further protests by the Cherokees would lead only to their annihilation at the hands of the whites. The pro-treaty Ridge faction was opposed by fiery John Ross, the leader of the majority National Party, who wanted to stay and fight in the Southeast against all odds.

Since Cherokee Tragedy was first published in 1970, it has been valued as a penetrating social and political history of neither the whole Cherokee Nation-nor just the Ridge family- from the last quarter of the eighteenth century to the 1838 Trail of Tears and the subsequent execution of the Ridges in Indian Territory.

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