maybe
The second great Indian removal was a policy in the United States to relocate Indian tribes. This was often done by force or trickery.
Jackson believed in Indian removal to free their lands for development.
yesss the Indian Removal Act
Andrew jacksons policy of implementing the Indian removal act by evicting the Cherokee tribe threatened the constitutional principle of?
Jackson believed in Indian removal to free their lands for development.
Andrew Jackson just wanted to get rid of the Indians he didn't really care about them.
The Indian Removal Act was a law passed during the presidency of Andrew Jackson. It lead to the transplantation of several Indian tribes and the Trail of Tears.
Benevolent policy :)
Native American tribes that lived east of the Mississippi River were the people most hurt by Andrew Jacksonâ??s Indian Removal Policy. These people did not know where they could go, how to survive on foreign lands, or who they could trust.
Martin Van Buren agreed with Jackson's Indian policy. The Indian Removal Act was passed by Congress in 1830, and signed into law by President Andrew Jackson.
Without doubt, Jackson favored the removal of American Indians to lands west of the Mississippi River, some will contend that he was inclined to do so in an effort to preserve the Indian culture. Others contend that his support of Indian Removal was an act of predjudice. There is also the opinion that financial consideration was involved in his policy. In any case, his policy carried on beyond his term of office,