If you don’t know the history about the Cherokee indians I am going to tell you in my essay. In my opinion i feel that the best chance of survival is to just accept new tribal lands and move west. After all the research about the Cherokee indians i feel if they want they tribe to be safe is to flea their land. The reasons i say the Cherokee should leave is because if they do leave they will be given 5,000,000 dollars and 7,000,000 acres of land. Another reason they should accept to move to the west is to prevent their tribe from being terminated by president andrew jackson by being attacked. More Reasons why the Cherokee should leave their land because if they leave they wouldn't have to try to copy the white settlers and they can start …show more content…
The reason is because they would receive 5,000,000 dollars to start over in the west. When the Cherokee receive the 5,000,000 for leaving they can buy some of the stuff they had on there old land. They will be able to buy some materials for new places to live.They will be able to buy some food for their tribe. Even though they won’t be able to get there gold back they still will be rich in dollar bills. Also they will receive 7,000,000 acres of land. On the other side of the argument there is a resist side. The resist side is telling them to resist because the Cherokee was their first,and there forefathers inherited that land,and that they was already rich in gold and nutrients. I said accept instead of resist because there tribe will become extinct and die out because the U.S Government will attack the Cherokee. Some more reasons the Cherokee should leave is if they don't they will be attacked and terminated by the Government. The Cherokee will be doomed because they wouldn’t have no more children and their tribe will be extinct. Some evidence of what Major Ridge said is “ accept his offer or Risk the terminations of their tribe”. He said that because if the Government attack the cherokee they will be destroyed because the cherokee doesn't have the weapons the government
The U.S. Government had many reasons or why the Cherokee removal was a good idea. One reason was even though Major Ridge, the Cherokee who signed the Treaty of New Echota, had no legal right to sign it, they still had a Cherokee signature (Exhibit J). They said Major Ridge claimed he represented all Cherokee when he only represented about 2000 Cherokee. Another good reason for the removal was that moving would likely save the Cherokee’s culture. If they stayed, they
It is a sad and angry time for the Cherokee people, but we mustn’t fight back any longer, instead I believe it is best to follow Major Ridge to the new home awaiting us in the West. Our stance in court against the Indian Removal Act has been ignored due to the threat of mutiny the Southern States are mustering up against the Federal Government. John C. Calhoun has challenged Federal Law for his state’s own interest and ultimately at our cost due to the fact that our land was used as a bribe in order to stop the continuation of the mutinous movement of the South. President Andrew Jackson, the man we fought the Creek Tribe so bravely against has selfishly turned his back on our people and our rights to our old beautiful land. Our Chief John Ross
Ever since the very first colonies were formed, the Native Americans have been forced out of their beloved inveterate lands in order for the Americans to be able to expand their new found territory. Yet, nothing ever changed and the same economic policies continued, bringing nothing but destruction to the Native people. Meanwhile, the political and social policies were dramatically distorted, deceiving the tribes into losing land and cultural values. Jackson’s efforts to remove any and all Cherokee Indians to territory west of the Mississippi in the 1830’s maintained the same economical attitudes as before but changed the social and political policies set by the previous colonies and the United States government towards the Native Americans.
One benefit of the act to the Indians is that they could have protection, for instance, Jackson "...warned Indians that the federal government could not protect them if they chose not to emigrate" (Cave, 1339). Therefore, if the Indians accepted the act, they would be granted protection from harm and everything else. However, if they refused, the Indians will have to survive on their own, which means that anyone can cause harm to them and it would not be counted as a crime committed or harassment. The Indians during this time were also protesting for the government to protect them such as their rights. In the end, the Indians would get what they have been fighting for, but with a
What would you do if you were offered millions of dollars for your land? Yes that right, the Indian tribes were moved out thanks to the Indian removal act of 1830. These Indian tribes were living in Louisiana. After the war of 1812 ended, the U.S. had purchased Louisiana from France. After exploring the land they chose to kick the Indian tribes forcefully because for the things they accomplished in the past. That’s what lead to the Indian removal act of 1830. The Indian removal act of 1830 was not justified because the Indians claimed their land first, the U.S. treated the Indians poorly, and it overall helped out the government.
“The Cherokee lived in what is now northern Georgia more than-one hundred years before the Georgians arrived. They created a real nation with its own written language, printing press and newspaper. They have a productive agricultural economy, with an iron working industry.” from an article Allow the Cherokee to stay it explained why Cherokees wanted to stay. why did 90% of the indians didn’t agree to move?
Andrew Jackson stated, “It will enable those states to rapidly advance in population, wealth, and power”(Document C). He believed the removal of Cherokees would open new opportunities to Americans. They would have more space to manufacture goods or grow crops. This would help economically because it allows the U.S. to export and sell more. It was also argued that removing the Cherokees would help them as well as the U.S. John C. Calhoun had said, “…the new country given to them should be … a permanent home fore themselves and posterity”(Document A).
There has always been a big debate on whether the Cherokee Indians should have or should not have been removed from the land they resided on. Although the common consensus of the whites was for removal, and for the Cherokees it was against removal, there were some individuals on each side that disagreed with their groups’ decision. The Cherokee Indians should have been removed from their homeland because the Cherokees would not have been able to survive on their own with the way they were living, they would not have been able to exist amidst a white population, and if they were removed, the whites would have helped them create a new and prosperous civilization.
The Cherokee indians were being forced out of the land that rightfully belonged to them. During the indian removal act of 1830 the Cherokee indians were being forced off their land that was rightfully theirs for natural resources,gold, and land that the United States of America said that belonged to them(video). When gold was discovered in Georgia,the Cherokee indians were in danger of being harmed by the whites that were in their land. Andrew Jackson stated,”It would incalculably strengthen the southwestern frontier and render adjacent states to repel future invasions. ”(book 355)
The Cherokee Indians were native far before any British settler arrived to North America. Yet the Cherokee Indians were still kicked out of their homes even though they had lived there for many centuries before the Americans. This journey for the Native Americans was known as the Trail of Tears. In my paper I will go over the average day of a Native American before they were moved, why some tribes were removed in 1830, and the aftermath the Trail of Tears had on the Cherokee Indians.
One famous Indian tribe is the Cherokee. The Cherokee are original residents of the American southwest region, but now they occupy most of Oklahoma.There are three recognized Cherokee tribes. Most Cherokee people speak English today, but many still speak the Cherokee language. Children had jobs to do after school just like men and women had their own jobs. Many Cherokee Indians died when president Andrew Jackson forced them to leave their homes in Georgia. In the following essay I will be talking about the Cherokee life before,during,and after the Westward Expansion.
And many jobs were unfinished from the U.S. The first reason why the Cherokees should stay is because they fought with the U.S in wars back then and helped. One of the ways that they helped in was the
Most of us have learnt about the Trail of Tears as an event in American history, but not many of us have ever explored why the removal of the Indians to the West was more than an issue of mere land ownership. Here, the meaning and importance of land to the original Cherokee Nation of the Southeastern United States is investigated. American land was seen as a way for white settlers to profit, but the Cherokee held the land within their hearts. Their removal meant much more to them than just the loss of a material world. Historical events, documentations by the Cherokee, and maps showing the loss of Cherokee land work together to give a true Cherokee
Since international law said that England had discovered the American colonies, they therefore owned all of the land. That meant that the natives or "uncivilized" people no longer owned the land. This group of the "uncivilized" consisted of many Indian tribes which were forced out of their homeland, including the Cherokee.
The Cherokee people were forced out of their land because of the settler’s greed for everything and anything the land had to offer. Many Cherokee even embraced the “civilization program,” abandoning their own beliefs so that they may be accepted by white settlers. Unfortunately for the Cherokee though, the settlers would never accept them as an equal citizen. A quote from historian Richard White says it very well, “The Cherokee are probably the most tragic instance of what could have succeeded in American Indian policy and didn’t. All these things that Americans would proudly see as the hallmarks of civilization are going to the West by Indian people. They do everything they were asked except one thing. What the Cherokees ultimately