the first half of the 1800s.
Indian Removal Act
the Indian Removal Act
he believed that the government had the power to tell native Americans where they could live
Indian removal act
All Indian tribes east of the Mississippi river were sent west of the Mississippi.
Indian Removal Act
Indian Removal Act
1830
Indian Removal Act.
The South
1830
The Indian Removal Act did not state that the Indian Had to go west of the Mississippi. The Act actually gave the President the right to negotiate with the tribes their removal to west of the mississippi. The tribes would first have to agree to this. Jackson broke this law and forced the removal of several tribes.
the Indian Removal Act
Andrew Jackson. He signed the Indian Removal Act of 1830, which authorized the forced removal of Native American tribes, primarily the Cherokee, from their ancestral lands in the Southeast to territories west of the Mississippi River. This resulted in the Trail of Tears, a tragic and deadly journey for many Native Americans.
1830
1830
the Indian Removal Act