Effect of Removal of the Cherokees By John G. Burnett During Andrew Jackson’s presidency from 1829 to 1837‚ a lot of controversial decisions were made. The removal of Cherokee Indians in the 1830’s was one‚ and this was more a change of the national policy than a reformulation. Since the Spanish came to the New World from the 1500’s‚ the continent’s inhabitants- Indians‚ were there. Beginning from the Washington government in the 1790’s‚ the policy United States used to administrate the Indians was
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often he did away with the laws of the constitution and followed his own ways. In 1829 Andrew Jackson created the Indian Removal Act. The Indian Removal Act was a law that stated that Native Americans that were settled east of the Mississippi River had to move west of the river to a portion of land that was set aside for them in the Oklahoma territory. The Cherokee Indians that were settled in Georgia became angry with the law and decided to sue the state of Georgia‚ because they felt like they
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written in history later on. The Chickasaw‚ a Native American tribe that first originated from Mississippi‚ was part many of many other tribes that suffered from the Indian Removal Act in 1830. President Jackson‚ demonstrated who his true colors were after he made the Chickasaw among four other groups walk in the middle of the winter into “Indian Territory”‚ also known as Oklahoma‚ “The United States promised to resume annuity payments and that the Chickasaw Nation would never become part of a new state
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treaties‚ and with the acts of congress.” President Jackson allowed an illegal genocide by the state of Georgia on my people. "Marshall has made his decision‚ now let him enforce it." Charge 3: NONE Charge 4: “We hold these truths to be self-evident‚ that all men are created equal‚ that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights‚ that among these are life‚ liberty and the pursuit of happiness.” Declaration of Independance. The Indian removal act and the treaty of New
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The removal of Native Americans from the region east of the Mississippi was both a necessary evil and sad inevitability. The suppression of expansion west and cultivation of the fertile land in the new frontier was stifling the growing nation. The native population at the time was still a predominantly primitive people when compared to the Anglo American settler and would find difficulty dealing with the changes brought on with cultivation and civilizing of the land. With no real way for the
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Home is like wearing a large sweater‚ the feeling of solitude and comfort. Being home is living peacefully with those you care the most. Many subjects have occurred throughout history with the Native Americans like the French and Indian war and Thanksgiving‚ but for a president [Andrew Jackson] to take away that sacred place they called home‚ is really devastating. Although the events‚ time periods‚ and ideas in American History are all memorable‚ The Trail of Tears is the most underrated time in
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difficulties that these Native Americans faced were misconstrued throughout the Trail of Tears site. Andrew Jackson’s pledge to forcibly move the Native Americans to a location west of the Mississippi River resulted in the Indian Removal Act in 1830. One of the largest tragedies in history‚ this act of relocating tribes such as the Cherokee‚ Chickasaw‚ Creek‚ Seminole‚ and Choctaw is known as the Trail of Tears. These tribes passed through Cadron during their treacherous relocation. With over 14‚000 Cherokees
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that happened in the 1830’s. Indian tribes were forced off of their land and they were involuntarily relocated to what is now Oklahoma. There was fear and resentment among the white settlers when it came to their Native American adversaries. They were a different kind of people than the whites when it came to how they lived‚ spoke‚ dressed and as well as their religious beliefs. This unfamiliarity with them led to the settlers believing that they were better than the indians and that they should leave
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an unfair patriarchy. As more and more people started arriving from Europe to America‚ the American population skyrocketed. This increased the need for land for the growing American population immensely. Led by Andrew Jackson‚ the relocation‚ and removal of Native Americans started to take place in 1930. Native American tribes such as the Cherokee were removed forcibly out of lands that their families had held for generations. This changed the roles of Native women‚ so they were given bigger roles
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Although Jackson establishes the eviction of Indians‚ he also assures his audience that forcing the Indians to move is morally correct; therefore‚ his narcissist morals grounded in racism create longstanding effects that future generations will feel. Andrew Jackson’s use of contrasting positive and negative diction convinces his audience of his rightness‚ and his cockiness still rings true to today. In his address to Congress in regards to indian removal policy‚ he says‚ “What good man would prefer
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