Indian Removal Act Essay

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    In 1830, the Indian Removal Act proposed by Andrew Jackson was passed by the Congress. Many Indians were forced to give up their lands and the resources, and relocate to the unsettled territory in the west of the Mississippi River. The Indian policy of America was rather mild in the beginning compared to later. The previous president, such as George Washington, encouraged the Indians to adapt to American cultures but also allows them to keep their traditions. Later, Thomas Jefferson followed this

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    The Indian Removal Act was a law passed by Congress on May 28, 1830, while Andrew Jackson was the president. The law approved the president to ask the Indians to move to land west of the Mississippi River in exchange for their homelands. There were many arguments president Andrew Jackson and the other members of the United States government used to convince society that the Indian Removal was best for everyone. For example, the members of the US government tried to persuade the Indians that their

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    “Urge to convert “unused” Indian land into into commercially productive cotton fields” (Wallace PG 191) The American people felt that the Indians deprived them of economic prosperity by ineffectively using land they believed belonged to them. This put the American government in a difficult position as they needed to

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    “Nations of dependent Indians, against their will, under color of law, are driven from their homes into the wilderness.” In the late 1820s, Americans arrived at the land of Native American tribes and Indian tribes for gold; they promised to relocate the tribes in exchange of money and land in order for them to expand their territory. The Indian Removal Act of 1830 was passed that gave Americans to negotiate with the Cherokees to leave the land and be placed in the Indian Territory. Tricking someone

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    the undersigned Chiefs and Warriors, of the Cherokee Nation of Indians, on the part aide Behalf of the said Nation.” The Treaty of 1791 took a turn when President Jackson enforced the Indian Removal Act. The Treaty of 1791 was a treaty meant for the Cherokees residing in Georgia, allowing them to live peacefully with white settlers. Lives were well until Jackson thought it would be better to implement the Indian Removal Act. This new act would force all Native Americans to resettle west of the Mississippi

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    relocation of five major Native American tribes to Indian Territory was the result of former President Andrew Jackson’s approval of the Indian Removal Act signed into law by congress on May 28, 1930. The Indian Removal Act gave Jackson the funds and authority to forcibly remove the Native Americans from their land in order to give their valuable property to white settlers who had begun to inhabit the surrounding areas.

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    The Indian Removal Act The passage of the Indian Removal Act of 1830 marked the turning point for American and Native American relations east of the Mississippi river. Before the act passed there were an estimated 125,000 Native Americans residing in Georgia, Tennessee, Alabama, and North Carolina, and Florida ("History.com", 2009, para. 1). With a decade of the acts passage there were but a handful of Native Americans left east of the Mississippi. What was the Act? Prior to the election of Andrew

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    The Indian Removal Act was signed in 1830 to give the Americans the right to move the Indians from their land. The Trail of Tears was soon put into use. It was used to move Native Americas from their homelands to make more room for the American settlers. Many natives did not complete the journey due to starvation and disease. The Indian Removal Act was a tragic and unfair event causing many deaths. Before this act, the natives and the colonists lived together peacefully. The Cherokee even intermarried

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    thousands of American Indians traveled half the country on foot? This was because of the Indian Removal Act. The Indian Removal Act is an act which says that the government has the power to move the American Indians to a specified location as long as the American Indians can keep that land forever. The government moved most of them to the now established Kansas because the explorer who explored Kansas called Kansas a desolate desert full of tribes who have no homes. Many American Indians did not like the

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    the Bahamas Islands were much like the Indians on the mainland, who were remarkable (European observers were to say again and again) for their hospitality, their belief in sharing.” The native people welcomed the Europeans with open arms when they docked on the Indian’s land. They

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