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LRB094 21103 DRH 59431 r |
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| HOUSE JOINT RESOLUTION
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| WHEREAS, The Cherokee Indians were once a great tribe |
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| living in and around the Great Smoky Mountains; they were |
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| probably the most civilized tribe in America with well |
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| established churches and schools; they are credited with an |
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| independent development of the log cabin; the Cherokees had |
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| their own recorded code of tribal laws with elected officials |
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| to govern them; they adopted the white man's ways and |
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| Christianity and were skilled at farming and cattle raising; |
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| and
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| WHEREAS, With the discovery of gold on Cherokee lands, a |
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| movement that had been gathering since about 1802 for the |
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| removal of all Indians to reservations began in earnest; the |
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| Georgia legislature passed a law that "no Indian or descendants |
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| of an Indian shall be deemed a competent witness in any case in |
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| court to which a white person may be a party"; other states |
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| containing Cherokee lands adopted similar laws; and |
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| WHEREAS, Many Cherokees were given whiskey by whites, who |
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| took advantage of their drunkenness and bribed the Indians out |
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| of their land holdings with paltry sums of money and empty |
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| promises; about 2,000 moved west through this trickery; some |
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| 15,000 were not fooled by these methods and were forced to walk |
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| the "Trail of Tears", as it became known for its many hardships |
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| and sorrows it brought to their people; and |
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| WHEREAS, President Andrew Jackson gave his full support to |
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| the removal of the Cherokees from their land; an armed force of |
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| 7,000 made up of militia, regular army, and volunteers under |
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| General Winfield Scott forced the remaining 15,000 Cherokees |
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| from their homes in the Great Smoky Mountains and removed them |
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| to stockades at the U.S. Indian Agency near Charleston, |
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| Tennessee; their homes were burned and their property destroyed |
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| and plundered; farms belonging to the Cherokees for generations |
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LRB094 21103 DRH 59431 r |
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| were won by white settlers in a lottery; and |
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| WHEREAS, The march of 1,000 miles began in the winter of |
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| 1838; carrying only a few light blankets and wearing scant |
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| clothing with daily rations of only salt pork and corn meal, |
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| many sickened and died along the way; medical care was nearly |
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| non-existent; only the very old, sick, and small children could |
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| be carried in wagons or ride on horseback; over 8,000 were on |
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| foot, most without shoes or moccasins; they crossed Tennessee |
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| and Kentucky; about the 3rd of December, 1838, they arrived in |
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| Southern Illinois at Golconda; and |
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| WHEREAS, To reach Golconda from Kentucky, the Cherokee had |
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| to cross the Ohio River; they were forced to pay $1 a head for a |
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| ferry passage on "Berry's Ferry" operating out of Golconda, |
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| which was rather exorbitant because it normally cost only 12 |
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| and half cents for a Conestoga wagon and all you could carry; |
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| "Berry's Ferry" made over $10,000 that winter out of the |
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| pockets of the starving Cherokees; they were not allowed |
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| passage until the ferry had serviced all others wishing to |
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| cross and were forced to take shelter under "Mantle Rock," a |
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| shelter bluff on the Kentucky side, until "Berry had nothing |
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| better to do"; many died huddled together at Mantle Rock |
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| waiting to cross; and |
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| WHEREAS, Many contagious diseases spread among the tribe |
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| during their journey - cholera, whooping cough, and small pox; |
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| the Cherokee were given used blankets from a hospital in |
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| Tennessee where an epidemic of small pox had broken out; |
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| because of the diseases, the Indians were not allowed to go |
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| into any towns or villages along the way; many times this meant |
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| traveling much farther to go around them; one family in |
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| Golconda had compassion on them, however, and shared their |
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| pumpkin crop with the Cherokee; and
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| WHEREAS, While staying near Golconda, several Cherokee |
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| were murdered by locals; the killers filed a lawsuit against |
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| the U.S. Government through the courthouse in Vienna, suing the |
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| government for $35 a head to bury the murdered Cherokee; they |
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| lost their suit and the bodies were thrown in shallow, unmarked |
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| graves near Brownfield where a monument to the Trail of Tears |
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| now stands; and
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| WHEREAS, The Cherokee marched on through Southern |
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| Illinois; their trail, which follows the course of what is now |
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| Illinois Route 146, is marked by crude camps from Golconda |
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| through Dixon Springs, Wartrace, Vienna, Mt. Pleasant, and |
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| Jonesboro to the Dutch Creek Crossing; about December 15, 1838, |
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| they were forced to spend the winter in the area of what is now |
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| the Trail of Tears State Forest; floating ice on the |
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| Mississippi River made it impossible to cross; many died there |
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| during the long, cold winter; Some were sold into slavery and a |
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| few escaped; and
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| WHEREAS, Those who escaped the march hid in the hills; some |
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| eventually returned to their land in the Smoky Mountains and |
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| their descendents live to this day in and around Cherokee, |
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| North Carolina; annually they re-enact the tragic events of |
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| that winter and their forced march in a play called "Unto These |
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| Hills"; at least 4,000 Cherokee Indians died that winter along |
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| with the pride of a nation that may never be restored; and
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| WHEREAS, Illinois Route 146 has not previously been |
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| officially designated by the State of Illinois as a historic |
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| route of the Trail of Tears; therefore, be it
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| RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE |
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| NINETY-FOURTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, THE |
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| SENATE CONCURRING HEREIN, that Illinois Route 146 is officially |
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| designated a historic highway and a route of the Trail of |
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| Tears; and be it further
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LRB094 21103 DRH 59431 r |
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| RESOLVED, That the Illinois Department of Transportation |
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| is requested to erect at suitable locations, consistent with |
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| State regulations, appropriate plaques or signs giving notice |
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| of the designation; and be it further |
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| RESOLVED, That suitable copies of this resolution be |
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| presented to the Secretary of the Illinois Department of |
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| Transportation and to Dr. K. Andrew West, president of the |
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| Trail of Tears Association, Illinois Chapter.
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