your answer is
Ross continued to oppose removal after these setbacks, and he was supported by the majority of Cherokees. After the court cases failed to bring relief, however, some Cherokees broke with their government and advocated removal as the tribe's only choice. Led by Major Ridge and Elias Boudinot, this "Treaty Party" signed the New Echota Treaty in late 1835, ceding all remaining lands east of the Mississippi, including those in present-day Alabama, in return for territory in what is now Oklahoma. Ross and his followers adamantly opposed the treaty, however. When the U.S. military deployed to Cherokee territory in 1838, Ross relented and accepted removal. During the long march west on the Trail of Tears, at least 4,000 of the migrants died, including Ross's first wife, Quatie, whom he had married in 1813. The couple had six children.
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