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The Machinery of the Trail of Tears
Episode 5558

The Machinery of the Trail of Tears

pplpod · pplpod

March 27, 202620m 32s

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Show Notes

In this episode, we explore the machinery of the trail of tears. Welcome everyone to another deep dive. I am so glad you are joining us today because our mission right now is to unpack a really profoundly dark and frankly incredibly complex chapter of history. Right. And it's one that I think a lot of people feel like they already know, you know, the trail of tears. Exactly. Like most of us, we have this, uh, this compressed JPEG version of this history in our heads. It's a blurry, low -resolution image of a tragic march. We learn about it in grade school, file it away under dark chapters, and that's kind of it. Yeah, it gets simplified into a single sad event. Right. But today... For this deep dive, we are looking at the high -resolution file. We really want to look at the actual gears of the machine that caused it. And to set the stage for you, the sleet, and snow. The conditions were unimaginably bad. And the logistics completely fell apart. The food rations... plummeted to starvation levels. The sources note that at one point, people were surviving on a handful of boiled corn, a single turnip, and two cups of heated water a day. Just, yeah, horrific. And the sheer misery of it was actually witnessed by the French philosopher Alexis de Tocqueville. Oh, really? He was there? Yeah. He happened to be in Memphis as the Choctaw were crossing the Mississippi River. He wrote about this air of ruin and destruction that hung over the entire scene. Wow. And there's a farewell letter mentioned in the text from Choctaw chief George W. Harkins addressed to the American people. It's just devastating to read. It really is. He wrote that they quote, rather chose to suffer and be free than live under the degrading influence of