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Cherokee phoenix
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Cherokee phoenix
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Description
Rating
Title
Cherokee
phoenix
URL
http://www.wcu.edu/library/DigitalCollections/CherokeePhoenix/
Hosting Agency
Western Carolina University, University of North Carolina (System)
Description
The
goal
of
Hunter
Library's
Cherokee
Phoenix
Project
has been to
offer
the
English
language
articles
concerning
Cherokee
Indian
and
regional
history
found
in the
Cherokee
Phoenix
newspaper
,
published
by the
Cherokee
Nation
from
1828-1834
.
Articles
of a
general
nature
or
reprinted
from
other
periodicals
but
having
no
direct
relation
to
Cherokee
or
regional
history
were not
included
. The
Cherokee
Nation
of
Indians
published
some
260
issues
of a
national
newspaper
under
the
titles
"
Cherokee
Phoenix
" and "
Cherokee
Phoenix
, and
Indians
'
Advocate
" from
1828
to
1834
.
Both
English
and
Cherokee
language
articles
appeared
in the
Phoenix
, with
approximately
30%
of the
column
space
devoted
to
articles
written
in the
Cherokee
syllabary
.
Publication
came
at the
critical
time
in
Cherokee
history
,
during
the
Cherokee
"
renaissance
" and
prior
to
forced
removal
of the
Cherokee
Nation
to
Indian
Territory
in
1838
. By the
late
1700s
, the
newly
inaugurated
United
States
began
to
supplant
European
dominance
in the
Southeast
. As the
United
States
asserted
political
,
social
and
demographic
control
over
the
Southeast
, its
relations
with the
Cherokees
and
other
Native
American
nations
altered
. A
significant
Native
American
population
lived
within
borders
of the
eastern
states
. Also, the
Southeastern
Indian
nations
still
held
claim
to
thousands
of
square
miles
of
land
in the
Southern
states
.
Policy
in the
first
years
of the
republic
encouraged
acculturation
and
possible
assimilation
into the
dominant
Anglo-American
society
.
Latter
policy
promoted
removal
of
Native
Americans
and
resettlement
outside
existing
state
boundaries
as an
option
.
Such
a
removal
became
a
possibility
with the
Louisiana
Purchase
in
1803
. A
determination
to
extinguish
Indian
title
to
lands
east
of the
Mississippi
River
intensified
after
1828
with the
election
of
Andrew
Jackson
as
President
and in
1830
when
Congress
approved
the
Indian
Removal
Act
.
Amid
conflicting
policies
of
assimilation
and
removal
, the
Cherokees
came
to the
fore
of
national
attention
with the
Cherokee
Nation's
struggle
to
maintain
its
integrity
,
retain
diminished
homelands
, and
organize
as a
political
entity
.
Confronted
with
mounting
pressure
to
cede
more
lands
and the
possibility
of
tribal
disintegration
, the
Cherokees
experienced
a "
renaissance
" of
cultural
development
and
purpose
.
Cherokee
achievements
in the
1820s
included
agrarian
improvements
, the
construction
of
roads
, the
application
of
mechanical
arts
, a
concern
for the
education
of their
youth
,
social
reform
movements
,
formal
organization
of a
Cherokee
national
government
, and the
development
by
Sequoyah
of a
written
Cherokee
language
. In
addition
, in
1826
the
Cherokee
government
authorized
"that a
person
be
appointed
whose
duty
it
shall
be to
edit
a
weekly
newspaper
at
New
Echota
, to be
entitled
, the
`Cherokee
Phoenix'....
" The
first
issue
of the
Cherokee
Phoenix
was
dated
February
21
,
1828
.
It
may
be
noted
that the
Phoenix
was
founded
contemporaneously
with
other
well
know
newspapers
,
such
as the
Charleston
Mercury
(1822)
,
New
York
Evening
Post
(1829)
, and
New
York
Sun
(1833)
.
During
the
Phoenix's
brief
existence
,
it
addressed
the
wide
spectrum
of
concerns
that
affected
the
Cherokee
people
,
both
major
and
minor
. The
Cherokee
Phoenix's
columns
reflect
both
a
unique
and
yet
startlingly
familiar
portrayal
of its
era
.
While
readers
in any
American
community
would have
recognized
the
news
items
and
features
,
it
offered
the
viewpoint
and
concerns
of a
Native
American
nation
. Its
columns
included
editorials
which
embodied
the
Cherokees
'
determination
to
retain
their
lands
;
news
on the
activities
of the
Cherokee
government
as
well
as
relations
with the
federal
and
state
governments
;
accounts
about
the
Cherokees
in
Arkansas
and
other
Native
American
nations
; and
social
and
religious
activities
in the
Nation
.
Major
events
that
warranted
extended
coverage
included
Congressional
debates
over
the
Indian
Removal
Act
, the
two
U.S
.
Supreme
Court
decisions
which
affected
Cherokee
rights
(Cherokee
Nation
v
.
Georgia
and
Worcester
v
.
Georgia)
, and
actions
by the
state
of
Georgia
to
assume
title
to
Cherokee
lands
. The
Cherokee
Phoenix
did
not
survive
to
give
an
account
of the
Cherokee
Nation's
last
days
in the
east
.
It
had
ceased
publication
on
May
31
,
1834
.
However
, its
six-year
run
helped
preserve
the
interests
,
hopes
, and
struggles
of
individuals
and of a
unique
community
.
Other Title
Cherokee
phoenix
from
Hunter
Library
Subjects
Indians of North America--North Carolina
Genealogy
Cherokee Indians--Newspapers
Indians of North America--Southern States--Newspapers
New Echota (G.A.)--Newspapers
Gordon County (G.A.)--Newspapers
Indians of North America--Southern States--History
Minorities--North Carolina
Place
Georgia
North Carolina
Date
1828-1834
Time Period
(1820-1860) Antebellum
Language
English
Format
Newspapers
Type
Text
Audience
All
Digital Collection
N.C. MOSAIC
Added to NC MOSAIC
2009-05-26
Updated in NC MOSAIC
2011-07-08
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