Jerry S.
Yelp
If you are anywhere close this museum, though small, is not to be missed. It's worth coming farther if you're not so close, though, and there's plenty else to see and do in the region. The exhibits are colorful and attractive, professionally curated and artfully presented (state-of-the-art audio-visual and interactive features), with a mix of preserved artifacts and many authentic reproductions. The historical assessment of Sequoyah is honest and revealing about the Cherokee leader and the circumstances and opposition (including from untrustworthy Euroamerican "allies") they faced along with the other Native Americans who lost their ancestral lands, from Carolina and Tennessee westward to Arkansas and the Oklahoma Territory at the end of the Trail of Tears. This museum complements the one in Sallisaw, Oklahoma. Also a good idea to get deeper and broader background perspective: the very fine museum and historical archives displays at the Hermitage Plantation museum of Andrew Jackson (east of Nashville, Tennessee), the frontiersman/statesman/military leader and US President who played a leading role in the subjugation of the Five Civilized Tribes, including the Cherokee.