Today at noon, the Clinton School Speaker Series and the Butler Center’s Legacies & Lunch jointly present a program. Justice Troy Poteete, executive director of the National Trail of Tears Association will speak at the Ron Robinson Theater.
Troy Poteete was appointed to the Cherokee Nation Supreme Court by Chief Chad Smith in 2007 and is the executive director of the National Trail of Tears Association, an organization he helped found. Justice Poteete also founded the Historical Society in Webbers Falls, Okla., served as executive director of the Cherokee Nation Historical Society, and was a delegate to the Cherokee Nation Constitutional Convention. In 2000, Justice Poteete was appointed executive director of the Arkansas Riverbed Authority, a tribal entity jointly created by the Chickasaw, Choctaw, and Cherokee Nations to administer their interests in the 96-mile section of the Arkansas River between Muskogee, Okla. and Fort Smith, Ark.
The Trail of Tears was actually several trails. Little Rock is one of the only cities (if not the only city) that members of all six relocated tribes passed through. Little Rock’s emerging merchant class benefited from the relocation efforts as the Federal government paid for goods and services in Little Rock.