- Cultural Calendar
September 15 marked the anniversary of the day when the last Cherokees arrived in Oklahoma in 1838, and today, September 16, is the Trail of Tears Remembrance Day.
The Trail of Tears National Historic Trail commemorates that journey, of over 2,200 miles across nine states, and the “Trail of Tears Walk” held in Mt. Juliet and Woodbury, Tennessee on September 16 and 17 memorializes the tragic and brutal removal of the five Indigenous nations — Cherokee, Muscogee Creek, Choctaw, Chickasaw, and Seminole — from their homelands in the 1830s to present-day Oklahoma. The Northern Route of the Trail of Tears passed through these two Middle Tennessee towns located just south of Nashville. Thousands of Cherokees and hundreds of Creeks and African Americans traveled together on their way to unknown homes in the west.
The “Trail of Tears Walk” was organized by Muscogee Creek Tribe member Melba Checote-Eads and has been held for the past 15 years.
For more information, visit https://www.nps.gov/trte/index.htm.