The story goes on to marvel that “15 percent of the Cherokees built at the Ohio plant” are “destined for international markets.”
When Campaign Spin Becomes Fact|Stuart Stevens|March 21, 2014|DAILY BEAST
"You feel the fate of John Ross and the Cherokees," author Hampton Sides wrote of Hicks' "probing, eloquent" history.
This Week's Hot Reads|The Daily Beast|January 4, 2011|DAILY BEAST
I called them (the Cherokees) together and made a short speech.
The Cherokee Nation of Indians. (1887 N 05 / 1883-1884 (pages 121-378))|Charles C. Royce
Many Indian tribes hunted in Kentucky, but the Cherokees were the most important.
Daniel Boone|Katharine E. Wilkie
Color symbolism plays an important part in the shamanistic system of the Cherokees, no less than in that of other tribes.
The Sacred Formulas of the Cherokees|James Mooney
Cherokees and the United States to mutually release prisoners captured one from the other.
The Cherokee Nation of Indians. (1887 N 05 / 1883-1884 (pages 121-378))|Charles C. Royce
The Cherokees agree to establish and maintain on the aforementioned roads the necessary ferries and public houses.
The Cherokee Nation of Indians. (1887 N 05 / 1883-1884 (pages 121-378))|Charles C. Royce
Cherokees
[ (cher-uh-keez) ]
A Native American tribe who lived in the Southeast in the early nineteenth century; the Cherokees were known as one of the “civilized tribes” because they built schools and published a newspaper. In the 1830s, the United States government forcibly removed most of the tribe to reservations west of the Mississippi River. (See Trail of Tears.)