Albion College American History Research Paper

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Humanities

Albion College

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Explore the controversies associated with American Indian removal as well as compare and contrast Native American and English and American values, including their respective worldwide views concerning the land and nature. Discuss the ideals and realities of the American Dream, democracy, morality, and justice in 19th century America. Include an assessment of Andrew Jackson, John Ross, the Cherokee, white defenders of the Indians, white settlers, the State of Georgia, manifest destiny, and the Trail of Tears. In your conclusion, comment also on the U.S. Indian policy before and after the Jacksonian Era by citing The Cherokee Removal, A People's History of the United States, First Along the River, and 10 Days That Unexpectedly Changed America.

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CONTROVERSIES ASSOCIATED WITH AMERICAN INDIAN REMOVAL AND NATIVE
AMERICAN/ENGLISH AMERICAN VALUES

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Surname 2
Controversies Associated with American Indian Removal and Native American/English
American Values
The Indian removal refers to the eviction of indigenous from their motherland to other
parts of the United States. The European settlers in the U.S confiscated land belonging to the
native after expelling most of the native tribes in the Southeastern states. President Andrew
Jackson oversaw the eviction of native tribes from their ancestral land by formally signing the
Indian Removal Act of 1830 to give way for the European settlers in the southeastern parts of the
continent. The act became an official policy of the U.S awaiting action.1 The act stipulated that
Indians and other native tribes’ move-outs of the southern states of Georgia and Florida to
territories west of Mississippi. Voluntary eviction of Indians from their native lands began in
September 1930 after the Choctaws signed the treaty allowing them to be voluntary relocate. The
Chickasaws agreed to leave their ancestral land in exchange for $ 3 million from the federal
government. The Cherokees and the Seminoles refused to voluntarily leave their ancestral land to
the west of Mississippi.2
After the expiration of the voluntary eviction period in 1838, the U.S army conducted an
operation for a forceful eviction of Native Americans. The Cherokees were hardly hit by the
forceful removal as most of them perished during the eviction scuffles and wars. About 8000

1

Perdue, Theda, and Michael D. Green. "The Cherokee Removal." A Brief History with
Documents. New York-Bedford (1995).
2
Ibid

Surname 3
Cherokees are said to have lost their lives in the eviction wars. Not only did the natives lose their
land in the eviction policy but also their family bonds, cultural and historical information, sites of
religious importance, and knowledge about their environment. The Cherokees who survived the
onslaught were forced to march 1000 miles to the west of Mississippi, where there was an
established territory to be occupied by the Indians. This event made the Indian eviction acquire
the name “Trail of Tears” because of the suffering the natives encountered before and along their
way to the “new land.” The Indian removal dates back to the Louisiana Purchase of 1803, where
the U.S federal government purchased a vast territory west of Mississippi.3 The Native
Americans were being...


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