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THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION IN INDIAN COUNTRY ____________________ A Paper Submitted to Dr ____________________ Number Name____________________ByYour NameYour Student ID[Date]Introduction The study as presented by Colin Calloway outlines a wide coverage experience of the Indian participation in the American Revolution and their first hand encounter as allies as well as enemies of the involved parties. Colin Calloway concentrates mostly on the eight Indian communities to have the real perspective of exploring more on how the revolution changed the course and transformed into the war between Indians fighting for their own struggle to gain independence.
Looking at the records from the Spanish, British, Americans and Canadians, Colin Calloway demonstrates how Native American were able to pursue different strategies as they went through difficult experiences but were able to uphold their legacy Colin Calloway writes that, "The Revolution marked an emphatic divergence between the Cherokees and their colonial neighbors as the warriors of both societies "took control of the path. This illustrate the lateness that was at hand because the Cherokee involvement in the revolutions was not a simple sign but it proved a powerful, durable and the same time usable image.
The clamor kept on growing especially in the 19th century on how to remove the Cherokees from their only remaining lands, although there were the strong peace efforts emanating from the village headsmen way back before the war, during the war, combined role that was played by the Chota as well as the new societies which were built from the outcome ruins of the war were not listened to but ignored. All this was in the favor of what was termed as memory of Cherokee antagonism in the revolution.
Therefore, the Cherokee had the responsibility again to begin afresh the practice of rebuilding their lives and homes past Mississippi. When the fighting came to an end due to the revolution it was very difficult for the Cherokees because they were like orphans, they were without a place completely in the universe. Because of the repercussion of the war, their population was affected drastically which led to serious drop of about 10,000 in number only and at the same time lost their homelands which was estimated to be around three-quarters as well as hunting grounds and towns were destroyed.
The revolutions grouped lower towns to be Chickamauga while those who remained neutral kept on dividing the Cherokee. Their cultural framework was affected so much which disrupted the harmony which existed amongst the Cherokee wellbeing in relation to their spiritual world. This caused a lot of disorder everywhere. Thousands of Cherokees were forced under prevailing conditions to move farther inland as the only remaining option of their nation in order to rebuild again. What they experienced out of the revolution convinced the whole of Cherokee community to believe that the war could not at any circumstance preserve them.
Despite constant internal cultural conflicts Cherokee had on the question of transition to farming, a number of them tried out acculturation on the hope that they will gain equal citizenship in the upcoming new nation with an aim of being admired by many Americans as a tribe that is civilized. In conclusion, the Cherokee people were reborn exactly like the phoenix straight away from the ashes characterized by defeat and confusion. This gave birth to a new Cherokee nation although it was late already1.
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHYCalloway, Colin Gordon. The American Revolution in Indian Country: Crisis and Diversity in Native American Communities. Cambridge [u.a.]: Cambridge Univ. Press, 1998.
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