Indian Removal Essay

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    Indian Removal Dbq

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    The states of Georgia and the United States of America chose to relocate the Muscogee (Creek), Cherokee, Chickasaw, Seminole, and Choctaw Indians from what was known as Indian territories then. By 1828, the Cherokee were civilized people since they had acquired most the western culture. Their women wore gowns, in addition to the Cherokees having a system of government. Moreover, they had built roads in their territories to show that they were ready to govern themselves. The people had decided that

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    Indian Removal Act

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    Indian Removal (Zinn Chapter 7) Once the white men decided that they wanted lands belonging to the Native Americans (Indians), the United States Government did everything in its power to help the white men acquire Indian land. The US Government did everything from turning a blind eye to passing legislature requiring the Indians to give up their land (see Indian Removal Bill of 1828). Aided by his bias against the Indians, General Jackson set the Indian removal into effect

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    a policy to remove Indians in the lands east of the Mississippi. Under the Indian Removal Act of 1830 Indians were forced to give up their lands east of the Mississippi and forced to move west of the Mississippi. Indian removal did not actually begin there. Prior to the Indian Removal Act of 1830, the United States used treaties and other means to remove Indians from lands that white settlers wanted or moved into. Aside from treaties the United States waged wars on Indians that refused to leave

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    the South Eastern regions of the U.S. as a result of the enactment of the Indian Removal Act in the year 1830. In the year 1838, in line with Andrew Jackson’s policy of the Indians’ removal, the Cherokee community was forced to surrender its land to the east of Mississippi River and migrate to the present day Oklahoma. This journey was referred to as the “Trail of Tears” mainly due to its devastating effects it had to the Indian people. The migrants faced extreme hunger, diseases and exhaustion due

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    Indian Removal Dbq

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    Authorizing the president to exchange unsettled land west of the Mississippi for Indian land within state borders, the Indian Removal Act was signed by President Andrew Jackson on May 28, 1830. Being pursued for nearly thirty years, the relocation of the Indians was desired primarily for pecuniary advantages and the termination of the contention between white settlers and “dangerous” Native Americans. While some tribes accepted their inevitable fate, many resisted and faced harsh government and social

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    doing what is right. For example, when Andrew Jackson was President, in December of 1830 he wrote the “Second Annual Message” about the removal of the Native Americans Indians including the Cherokee, Chickasaw, and the Muscogee tribes from their homelands in the east, to land west of the Mississippi. This letter gave Americans an update on how the Indian removal authorized in May of 1830 had been progressing, and according to Jackson’s report, it was very successful. Jackson also took this as an

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    Indian Removal Dbq

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    place you call home. It’s not that great right? So just imagine the dread that the Indians felt when the Americans forced them to leave. In the 1830 the Americans believed that they needed to expand America west. This was the westward expansion. In order to do this though they needed the Indians to move. the Indians however refused to move, but eventually the Americans forced them out. The removal of Indians was not justified because it was their land first, the Americans didn’t give them time

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    Picture a world where Andrew Jackson was considered one of the major presidents along with George Washington, JFK, and Abraham Lincoln. He would be a president that other people look up to. This fantasy might have become a possibility if Andrew Jackson actually was a good president and also a good man. Sadly, this is not reality and Andrew Jackson is one of the many neglected presidents that do not stand out. This president did nothing morally outstanding for our country and that should be recognized

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    Indian Removal Changes

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    It has been 186 years since the Indian Removal Act was passed by Congress during Andrew Jackson’s presidency. The way other people view Native Americans, particularly the Choctaws and Chickasaws, has changed drastically over time; but how has that changed the way Native Americans view themselves. I plan to explore what it meant to be Native American at the time of Indian Removal and compare it to what it is believed to mean to be Native American today. I plan to look at the cultural attitude that

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    Dbq Indian Removal

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    Because of the desire for land and the discovery of gold in Georgia, there was a push in doing what was necessary to remove Indians from their land (Native History Association). This was the time of Manifest Destiny, where white moved all over the country in hopes to spread their culture and customs. This involved them moving onto Indian land (Peppas 2013, 14). Even though gold was found on Cherokee land, the Cherokee could not touch it because the government did not want the Cherokee to have access

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