Cherokee Tears
by
Book Details
About the Book
The Cherokee Indians are driven into Army stockades before their 183839 removal to the West, but Hettie and Sky, 16-year-old Cherokee twins; manage to escape to a cave in the Smoky Mountains.
Benjamin Stone, a young Army officer, loves Hettie but takes part in the Cherokee roundup anyway and then serves as a military escort on the tragic Trail of Tears west. Hettie's family, meanwhile, is barely surviving in the cave on old-fashioned Cherokee lore, and their grandmother's loathsome pot scrubbers.
Ben learns rudimentary medicine from a kindly old doctor on the Trail and does his best to alleviate the suffering around him. Following many hardships, including the death of his patient, Quatie Ross, and the adoption of Tuti, an orphaned Cherokee, Ben returns from the West to search for Hettie and ask for her forgiveness.
About the Author
Ann Emmons Petri and George Beale Emmons grew up on a Potowomut, Rhode Island dairy farm that was once part of the hunting grounds of the Narragansett Indians. Ann and her husband Bill live in McLean, Virginia, George and his wife Jan in Monterey, Massachusetts.