Trail of Tears to Indian Territory

Billie Stone Fogarty, M.Ed.
Jan 25, 2023
1.0K views
CC
Want to watch the full webinar?
Join now to access all 2,186 webinars and unlock all features.

Content

Play. Playing.
Welcome
1m 45s
Play. Playing.
Speaker's Introduction
1m 23s
Play. Playing.
Introduction
11m 08s
Play. Playing.
Indian Removal Act
12m 22s
Play. Playing.
Removal Routes
11m 42s
Play. Playing.
Indian Territory
10m 15s
Play. Playing.
Conclusion
15m 45s
Play. Playing.
Announcements / prizes
4m 14s
Play. Playing.
Questions / answers
13m 40s

About this webinar

Following the 1830 Indian Removal Act about 100,000 American Indians were forced from their homes to westward lands. Follow their story, their trails, and their records.

About the speaker

About the speaker

Billie Stone Fogarty, a full-time professional genealogist, is the past president of the Association of Professional Genealogists, Vice President of the Oklahoma Genealogical Society, and a state-wide elected member of the Oklahoma Historical Soci
Learn more...

Comments (76)

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

1000 characters remaining

Sort by Newest
Sort by Close.
  • Newest
  • Oldest
  • Likes
  1. ED
    Elaine Drury
    1 year ago

    Thank you for sharing this with us ❤️

    Reply
  2. SS
    shelly singleton
    1 year ago

    i was born in okla. my mother’s family lived in and around marlow okla 1885. many people who lived in okla have family members who married and intermingled with indian people. i can relate with everything that was stated in this lecture today. thank you

    Reply
  3. TP
    tim prince
    1 year ago

    As a cousin of the grandchildren of Elizabeth Quatie, who died on the trail, and of the family of John Forsyth, a chief implementor of the policy of Presidents Jackson and Van Buren, I am grateful for this opportunity to become better informed.

    Reply
  4. LS
    Linda Smith
    1 year ago

    Very interesting

    Reply
  5. RW
    Ruth Watson
    1 year ago

    Excellent research, presentation, of our sadly oppressive American History – and its gentle reminder that it is not only possible today, but is indeed happening by our silence today. Having lived through WWII; visited Tallequah OK ‘ and active with UN NGOs related to indigenous peoples; I appreciate being awakened by yet another voice risking speaking truth to Powers. Ruth Watson

    Reply
  6. BJ
    Blaine Jensen
    1 year ago

    So interesting. Having read books like “The Trail of Tears”, I was enthralled at the factual information presented by Billie. I think we need a Rosetta Stone for Sequoia’s language. If we only could read what documents remain, we probably could learn a lot from what the native American tribes knew and thought.

    Reply
  7. GP
    Gail Peterson
    1 year ago

    This was wonderful, and yes I had a few tears also, this is a heartbreaking story .but so well done,

    Reply
  8. SF
    Sherry F Jackson
    1 year ago

    EXCELLENT

    Reply

Related Webinars