The Treaty That Was Not a Treaty
Andrew Jackson, the Cherokee Nation, and the Architecture of Forced Removal
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Narrated by:
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Pat Devon's voice replica
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By:
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Robert Walker
This title uses a narrator's voice replica
The Treaty That Was Not a Treaty
In December 1835, fewer than five hundred Cherokee signed the Treaty of New Echota—a document never ratified by the Cherokee National Council or the Cherokee people. Congress accepted it anyway, by a single vote.
Three years later, sixteen thousand Cherokee were marched at bayonet point from Georgia to Oklahoma. Four thousand died in stockades, on frozen roads, and by the ice-choked Mississippi. The mortality rate rivaled the Bataan Death March. General Winfield Scott's orders called for "every possible kindness," yet one in four never arrived.
The Treaty That Was Not a Treaty tells this story through the eyes of those who lived it and those still reckoning with its consequences.
Eliza Sixkiller built her farm according to every American standard, only to be given fifteen minutes to leave. She walked eight hundred miles, burying her family in unmarked graves, proving that survival is its own form of resistance. In the present day, Cherokee historian Dr. Samuel Hummingbird uncovers the bureaucratic notations that reduced human lives to ink lines, tracing the legacy of removal from the archives to the halls of Congress.
Andrew Jackson believed he was a hero, even as he destroyed the most successful indigenous democracy on the continent to satisfy land-hungry constituents. He expanded the franchise for the "common man" while refusing to recognize the citizenship of the Cherokee.
The documents remain. The descendants remain. The reckoning continues.
©2026 Robert Walker (P)2026 Robert Walker