Relier Pairs Westward ExpansionVersion en ligne Evaluate the impact of land policies pursued by Georgia; include the headright system, land lotteries, and the Yazoo land fraud par Aaron Stinson 1 ________________ was the Creek chief who sold the last of his people’s land when he signed the Treaty of Indian Springs. He was executed by the Creek for doing this. 2 The ______________was where people purchased tickets in hopes of winning land. The land settlers won, however, was Native American land. 3 1)___________ was a Cherokee man who created the Cherokee 2)________ (similar to an alphabet). The syllabary was a written form of the Cherokee language. This allowed the Cherokee to read and write in their native tongue. 4 5 Capitals of Georgia 5 Abraham Baldwin worked to establish this school, that would become the first public university in the country. 6 Members of Georgia’s General Assembly were bribed by land companies to sell the land (even though they technically didn’t own it). Georgia would lose land west of the Chattahoochee River establishing Georgia modern day border 7 He signed the Indian Removal Act, which eventually placed Native American tribes out west in Indian Territory (modernday Oklahoma). 8 Lyman Hall helped support the rebuilding of these two denominations (groups) of churches. 9 was the chief of the Cherokee during the Trail of Tears. Ross fought to help protect the land of the Cherokee by appealing to the US Congress. 10 _______________was a Creek Chief who fought in the Oconee War to keep his people’s land. Eventually, some of that land was given away in the Treaty of New York 11 The discovery of gold in _____________ by a man named Benjamin Parks led to a massive gold rush in the area – the first in the United States. Unfortunately, this gold rush also drove more Georgians to desire Native American land President Andrew Jackson Dahlonega Yazzo Land Fraud Land Lottery John Ross Savannah, Augusta, Louisville, Milledgeville, Atlanta Baptist and Methodist Alexander McGillivray University of Georgia William McIntosh . 1) Sequoyah 2) syllabary