All lands were "indian lands". The settlers could not avoid them.
The Englishmen were disrupting the natives, hunting, faming and general way of life. They encroached on ancestral land and caused the death of many an Indian. Oh, and he was convinced, with reason, that the Plimouth settlers' killed his older brother.
At first, settlers were forbidden to cross the Appalachian Mountains in a treaty the British made with the Indian tribes. But explorers did cross, including a George Washington crossing the Blue Ridge Mountains to survey the lands. However, it wasn't until late 1790s that settlers ventured into Ohio Territory. They worried about the land deeds because many groups claimed ownership of Ohio even after the French & Indian War.
No, they crossed through mountain valleys and passes.
for adventurer is the Indian on the temple on top of the mountains in perion for cynus it is in cynus lands( u go there by a ship in ellinia)
The Indian Ocean.
If you Go west you will go through the Artic and the Pacific. If You go east you will go through the Atlantic and the Artic/ Atlantic and the Indian.
To put it bluntly Jackson felt that the only good Indian was a dead one. He built his reputation on killing native Americans and there were many who agreed with him. The US policy towards the Native Americans was one of discrimination and it was apartheid at it's very worse. The Indian Removable Act moved native people off of ancestral lands so settlers could take the land or the railroad go through. Moving people to reservations meant that they were unable hunt, and unable to live within reasonable means. It was death and Jackson was intolerant in his attitude to Native Americans.
At first it was to make deals and treaties with them, but they kept breaking those deals, and eventually they just wanted to move them to specific lands, away from where other settlers wanted to go so that their original lush and rich lands could be given to colonists.
At first it was to make deals and treaties with them, but they kept breaking those deals, and eventually they just wanted to move them to specific lands, away from where other settlers wanted to go so that their original lush and rich lands could be given to colonists.
At first it was to make deals and treaties with them, but they kept breaking those deals, and eventually they just wanted to move them to specific lands, away from where other settlers wanted to go so that their original lush and rich lands could be given to colonists.
As people began to move west they wanted the Native American lands. The Indian Relocation Act of 1830 officially said that the tribes were to be removed. From the very moment of the first colony the European settlers did their best to kill, remove, or displace the Native tribes from their lands. The government made treaties they broke and they forcibly removed people to reservations. The Federal army would go into a sleeping village early in the morning and kill men, women, and children. The government policy was a " good Indian was a dead one" and they would do anything to accomplish this task. Read Black Elk Speaks or Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee for further understanding of the genocide that was committed.
They believed if they didn't move peacefully, they would be moved by force.