True
The Indian Removal Act
The Sauk, led by Chief Black Hawk, resisted removal through a series of conflicts known as the Black Hawk War in 1832. They fought against the US Army and militias in an attempt to regain their ancestral lands in Illinois. Despite their initial resistance, the Sauk were eventually defeated and forcibly removed to lands west of the Mississippi River.
vdfjgiereiov
more room for the amerian to settle
the first half of the 1800s.
Osceola (1804 - January 30, 1838) was an influential leader with the Seminole in Florida. Osceola led a small band of warriors in the Seminole resistance during the Second Seminole War when the United States tried to remove the Seminoles from their lands. He exercised a great deal of influence on Micanopy, the highest-ranking chief of the Seminoles
The response of the Seminoles was different from that of the Cherokee when they were removed from their lands in that they did not agree at all to
They were subjected to the Indian Removal laws, ousted from their Eastern lands, and resettled in the Indian Territory.
Osceola
The Seminole Indian war chief Osceola (born Billy Powell) led his tribes fight against being removed from Florida. He was famous because he was one of the leaders of the Seminole Tribes during the second war during the 1830s in the United States. According to legend, Osceola stabbed the Treaty of Payne's Landing with his knife, refusing to agree to give up the Seminole lands. That is probably one reason why he is famous.
Indian Removal Act was a law passed in 1830 under President Andrew Jackson which authorized president to negotiate with Native Americans in Southern states for removal to federal territory west of Mississippi river after getting paid for their lands. Although legally the removal had to be voluntary, it was used to coerce Native Americans to agree to removal. This even led to war between Americans and Seminoles. The war is called The second Seminole war.
5
The Indian Removal Act
The Sauk, led by Chief Black Hawk, resisted removal through a series of conflicts known as the Black Hawk War in 1832. They fought against the US Army and militias in an attempt to regain their ancestral lands in Illinois. Despite their initial resistance, the Sauk were eventually defeated and forcibly removed to lands west of the Mississippi River.
The indian removal act
1830
The Seminole Indian war chief Osceola (born Billy Powell) led his tribes fight against being removed from Florida. He was famous because he was one of the leaders of the Seminole Tribes during the second war during the 1830s in the United States. According to legend, Osceola stabbed the Treaty of Payne's Landing with his knife, refusing to agree to give up the Seminole lands. That is probably one reason why he is famous.