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Cherokee History: The Trail of Tears and Missionary Evan Jones


Editor's Note: I love this story of Missionary Evan Jones because he truly followed Christ and he helped bring the Gospel to our Cherokee ancestors. This an excerpt of a recent story by Simonetta Carr, posted at Place for Truth:

 The Trail of Tears

In the spring of 1838, when it was clear that removal was inevitable, Cherokee Chief John Ross divided his people into regiments, placing Jesse Bushyhead at the head of one and making Jones the assistant commander of another. Jones was one of the few white missionaries who accompanied Native Americans during their removals. His letters provide an important account of the Natives’ struggle on the Trail of Tears.

After being dragged from their homes with just the clothes they were wearing, the Cherokees were taken to detention camps while awaiting removal. There, about 175 Cherokees asked to be baptized.

During the march, Bushyhead and Jones continued to hold worship services and to care for the people’s physical and spiritual needs. In December, after 75 days of continuous march, with 529 miles behind them and 300 more to go, Jones feared the effects of the advancing winter for the frail and elderly and those who had only thin clothes on their back. Their only remedy was to send someone ahead of the others to start fires at short intervals.

“I am afraid that, with all the care that can be exercised with the various detachments, there will be an immense amount of suffering, and loss of life attending the removal. Great numbers of the old, the young, and the infirm, will inevitably be sacrificed. And the fact that the removal is effected by coercion, makes it the more galling to the feelings of the survivors.”[4]

Evan was joined by his son John in 1854. Together, they worked on a translation of the Bible into Cherokee – a version they insisted on using in their schools, despite opposition from the Baptist Board of Missions.

But the colonists were not the only ones to contest some of the missionaries’ teachings. Some of the wealthy Cherokees who had become slave owners expelled John Jones from their territories for his appeal to free their slaves. Evan voluntarily left for a while during the most heated moments of the Civil War.



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