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    Westward Expansion Although the United States had good reasons for kicking the Indians off their land like mining and housing for the extreme population growth‚ the United States wasn’t justified in its treatment of the Native Americans during the period of Western Expansion. The United States forced the Indians to move from their land and go more west every time they kept finding gold. The Indians had been there for years before the Americans even started their colonies so they had ancestral

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    1) The Earliest Americans a) The first settlers of the New World arrived over a land bridge between modern-day Alaska and Russia i) There were more than 54 million people inhabiting the two continents by the time that Europeans arrived in 1492 ii) Over time‚ they split into many tribes‚ developing more than 2‚000 separate languages and cultures iii) Native Americans in Central and South America were hunters‚ gatherers‚ and farmers specializing in maize‚ or corn. (1) About 5000 B.C. hunter-gatherers

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    In 1803 the Louisiana Purchase took place. The Louisiana Purchase doubled the size of the United States and covered about 827‚000 square miles west of the Mississippi River. After the Louisiana Purchase‚ many Americans began migrating west in hopes of obtaining land and securing wealth. Approximately 7 million Americans migrated by 1840‚ However the Native Americans were already established there. They were doing well for themselves providing everything they needed to survive for their families and

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    It take at least nearly 30 years for Andrew Jackson for the benevolent policy of the government to agreement with the settlements Indian affairs. His relation with the Indian with policy is to removal the white agreements to pursuit the happiest with own community and the most important was to get rid of the last session of the congress. Their are the particularly advantages that they can both cause collision between the general and state governments because it can strike a country of disaster‚ having

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    trail of tears

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    Trail of Tears (Rough Draft) How do you feel about The Trail of Tears? Do you support the removal of Indians? In 1830‚ President Andrew Jackson signed the Indian Removal Act. Indian tribes were forced to move from their homelands to the Indian Territory. On their journeys to the Indian Territory‚ the Indians faced exposure‚ disease‚ and starvation. Many died on their journeys. The Native Americans began to call this trail "The Trail of Tears." In my opinion‚ the Trail of Tears was a very

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    Daniel Boone

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    The Life and Times of Col. Daniel Boone is a non-fiction piece of literature which was written by Nancy Ellis. This book was published by AuthorHouse‚ and this book ultimately deals with the adventures of Daniel Boone. Nancy Ellis wrote this book because Daniel Boone was one of the most intriguing people America has ever produced. Throughout this book there are many examples of how unordinary this man is. From killing a cougar when he was a mere child‚ to volunteering for the War of 1812 at an age

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    History is what shapes our daily lives. All the past events such as fights for justice and freedom make it possible to survive in today’s day and age. In the past many people were discriminated against because of the color of their skin while others were forced and bullied to move off of their own premises just because others had that authority. A lot of history that is learned about and recognized is because of the works and writings available for us to read. Through literature we learn a lot of

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    President Jackson was well known because of his decision making‚ and the choices he has made. Andrew Jackson went thru different controversies as a president‚ he argued for what he believed in and what he thought was right. The National bank‚ moving Indian tribes and the law making of South Carolina. On February 1834 president Jackson went to the National bank to decuse some prior incidents. As he spoke to the bankers‚ he had said “ I have been a close observer of the doings of the Bank of the United

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    In Sherman Alexie’s fiction‚ “The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven‚” Alexie narrates some story presented by some unreal events that happened in the reservation‚ but he conveyed these stories with real elements such as emotions‚ facts from history‚ or even what he remembers from his memory as to what he claims as “reservation realism”. On page 18‚ Alexie quotes‚ “Indians make the best cowboys.” This claim makes sense because of the widespread history of Indians in the reservation with horses

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    Tocqueville create a tone of sympathetic. In “A Letter to Countless de Tocqueville” he delineates for the reader an impartial observation of the suffering of Native Americans under The Indian Removal Act. The terrible trip across the South to the Indians new land left the Indians with mental and physical struggles. This journey killed thousands of Indians and their agonies didn’t go unremarked. Alexis de Tocqueville‚ a Frenchman‚ observed and recorded every aspect of the new nation and wrote a letter

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