The trail of tears was a horrible part of American history. “The forcible removal and transport in 1838 to 1839 of thousands of Cherokees from their ancestral homeland in the southern uplands.”(the way we lived, 156) “At the beginning of the 1830s, nearly 125,000 Native Americans lived on millions of acres of land in Georgia, Tennessee, Alabama, North Carolina and Florida–land their ancestors had occupied and cultivated for generations. By the end of the decade, very few natives remained anywhere…
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between Native Americans and Colonists There are many reasons Native Americans and European Colonists did not have a good relationship. The reason for conflict between Colonist and Indians was due to the Colonists insatiable greed for power and land. Some of the reasons not only included physical mistreatment but also an ethical mistreatment of the Native Americans. European Colonists not only brought with them many different diseases that would later aid in the genocide of many Native American…
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becoming president, he needed to evacuate the Indian nation. President Andrew Jackson signed a law, The Indian Removal Act that followed up on May 28, 1830. Jackson had dissented and treated Indian tribes as though they were outside countries. The president Andrew Jackson did not hate Indians as a race, he believed the Indian civilization progress was lower than whites. The government wanted to move the Indians from their tribal lands. The act placed the Indians west of the Mississippi River in exchange…
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justified in his occupations in forcing the Indians to move out of their land. This was known as the Indian Removal Act of 1830. It was the first piece of legislation recommended and passed by Jackson. The reasoning for this is that the Supreme Court did not authorize the act. In fact, they stated that it could not be done. As well as this, the Indians were treated in an extremely brutal manner. Furthermore, the land originally belonged to the Indians. Therefore, it is unjust to force them out of…
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1800s were purposefully antagonistic against the Native Americans, as they would be the primary receivers of foreign oppression. Furthermore, Zinn argues that such relations were the result of continual tension between indians and Colonists after many tribes had sided with the British in the Revolutionary War, and still had to deal with American expansionism. Zinn also states that the man responsible for what would eventually become the Trail of Tears, was a ruthless individual who was really only…
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phrase that expresses the belief that the United States was destined to expand the entirety of the North American continent, from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific. Promoters of Manifest Destiny believed that expansion was not only good, but that it was obvious (manifest) and certain (destiny).99 The term combined a belief in expansionism with other popular ideas of the era such as: American exceptionalism, Romantic nationalism, and a belief in the natural superiority of what was then called the…
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Native Americans were the first people to live on the continent formerly known as the New World. When European nations discovered the continent, they set out to claim lands and expand their empires. When the United States had achieved its independence, it set out to expand over the continent. This is known as Manifest Destiny, and Americans felt they had a right to take every inch of the continent. This expansion first started in 1787 with the Northwest Ordinance, and continued until 1890 with…
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NATIVE AMERICAN GENOCIDE Tsering Dolkar Tsering Dolkar Hum 100.3 Instructor: Phil Nelson Date: 12/10/2014 Native American Genocide Genocide, a term forged from the Greek word ‘genos’ meaning “race, people” and the Latin word ‘cidere’, which means “to kill”, was first coined by Raphael Lemkin, a Polish lawyer of Jewish descent in his work about the Nazi occupation of Europe. Ever since, the word has become ubiquitous and used without fail to describe and define the gravest and the most…
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Westward Expansion Traveling West in search of a better life showed the spirit of the American Dream: to create a better life for oneself. Starting in the early 1800’s Americans swarmed West settling across the continent. The men and women knew that they possessed the power to expand the country and nothing was going to get in their way. The term Manifest Destiny was coined, by the newspaper editor John O. Sullivan, to encourage expansion. Western expansion was greatly beneficial to America because…
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areas; south Alleghenies, southwest Virginia, western North Carolina and South Carolina, north Georgia, east Tennessee, and northeast Alabama, and claiming even to the Ohio River. The Cherokee Indians were one of the largest of five Native American tribes who settled in the American Southeast portion of the country. The tribe came from Iroquoian descent. We had originally…
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