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Cherokee Nation Announces 2021 Remember the Removal Bike Ride Participants


Cherokee Nation Chief of Staff Todd Enlow, Principal Chief Chuck Hoskin Jr., mentor cyclist Ronnie Duncan, cyclist Whitney Roach, mentor cyclist Tracie Asbill, cyclist Melanie Giang, cyclist Kaylee Smith and cyclist Shace Duncan.


Monday, May 3, 2021 - Four cyclists and two mentor riders from the Cherokee Nation will participate in the 2021 Remember the Removal Bike Ride this June, retracing an estimated 950 miles along the northern route of the Trail of Tears by bicycle.


The ride spans from Georgia to Tennessee, Kentucky, Illinois, Missouri, Arkansas and Oklahoma over nearly three weeks.


The cyclists began training in December 2019 and were originally scheduled to participate in the ride during summer 2020, but the COVID-19 pandemic caused the 2020 ride to be canceled. The program is now implementing a number of safety precautions this year to allow the participants to complete the journey.


“The Remember the Removal Bike Ride is such a tremendous opportunity for our Cherokee youths to learn the history and honor the legacy of their ancestors who endured some of the worst tragedy in the history of the Cherokee Nation,” Principal Chief Chuck Hoskin Jr. said. “Canceling the ride in 2020 was disappointing, but we knew that it was absolutely the right decision to make to ensure no one’s safety was jeopardized in the midst of the worst public health crisis in generations. Our cyclists, our ride coordinators and the volunteers who will join them have all received the COVID-19 vaccine and will soon be ready to begin their journey. When they return home, I know that they will have forever been changed by their experience and will have a deeper understanding of our Cherokee history and of their own strength and perseverance.”


The cyclists will average around 60 miles a day along the routes used by their Cherokee ancestors, who made the same trek by foot more than 180 years ago. Of the estimated 16,000 Cherokees who made the journey to Indian Territory in 1838 and 1839, about 4,000 died because of starvation, disease and exposure to the elements.


Participants were selected based on an essay, in-person interview and a physical to ensure they are up for the grueling challenge. As part of their training, the group spends weekends undergoing rigorous physical training and cycling on various routes throughout the Cherokee Nation reservation.


Melanie Giang, 21, of Claremore said being chosen for the ride was an emotional experience.

“To me it means that I have been given such an honorable position in that we not only have the chance to learn about our ancestors, but that we also get the chance to retrace the trail and reflect on the hardships that our people endured so we can be better ambassadors for our people,” she said.


Whitney Roach, 22, of Tahlequah is a former Miss Cherokee. “When I was chosen to be on the ride, I felt a sense of pride grow within me,” she said. “I not only get to represent myself and my family, but I get to represent my ancestors who were forced on the removal. My ancestors are why I am here today and I have the opportunity to retrace their steps in remembrance of their strength and resilience.”


The cyclists had their family trees mapped out by a professional genealogist, providing them insight into their ancestral past as well as connecting any family links they might share with one another.


During the trek, the cyclists will visit several Cherokee gravesites and historic landmarks. Among the sites are Blythe Ferry in Tennessee on the westernmost edge of the old Cherokee Nation, and Mantle Rock in Kentucky, where during the winter of 1838-1839, Cherokees spent several weeks waiting for the Ohio River to thaw and become passable.


The Cherokee Nation cyclists will be joined by three cyclists from the Eastern Band of the Cherokee Indians in North Carolina. Together, they will start the ride May 31 in New Echota, Ga., a former capital of the Cherokee Nation.


Cyclists and staff who will accompany the cyclists throughout the journey have all received COVID-19 vaccinations. Participants will be following COVID-19 safety guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and Cherokee health-care experts during the bike ride, and will be accompanied by trained medical staff.


For more information on the Remember the Removal Bike Ride or to follow along during the journey, visit www.facebook.com/removal.ride.


The 2021 Remember the Removal Bike Ride cyclists from the Cherokee Nation include the following:

Shace Duncan, 18, Stilwell

Whitney Roach, 22, Tahlequah

Melanie Giang, 21, Claremore

Kaylee Smith, 20, Tahlequah

Ronnie Duncan, 48, Stilwell, mentor rider

Tracie Asbill, 39, Tahlequah, mentor rider




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