because the U.s promised to give the indians food, clothing, and shelter.
because they found gold on a cherroke Indian reserve and wanted it for themselves and they made the Indians suffer through a whole winter of westward travel
because they wanted more land and where mean and hatefull
because the U.s promised to give the indians food, clothing, and shelter.
they want to take over the Indian's land
5
They moved west on what became known as the Trail of Tears
After the first 150 years the song dynasty lost some of its northern territory to invaders and moved its capital to the south.
After the first 150 years the song dynasty lost some of its northern territory to invaders and moved its capital to the south.
Bach has moved 1,023 times
they wanted their land for the good farming
The result of the Indian Removal Act was that it allowed the President to remove Native Americans from their homelands. In return for the land they lost, the Native Americans would receive land in the Indian Territory, which is now the state of Oklahoma. by Mikayla Gear: > Native Americans were moved to lands west of the Mississippi River. (by gamzee for apex)
The state that most Native Americans were moved to during the Indian Removal Act was Oklahoma.
Moved to reservations.
Indian Removal Act.
Indian Removal Act
Native Americans were moved from ancestral lands to reservations.
They forced to moved west or north or to live on reservations
They forced to moved west or north or to live on reservations
They forced to moved west or north or to live on reservations
They forced to moved west or north or to live on reservations
The Native Americans tried to defend their territory, but were not strong enough to protect themselves and their homes. They were either killed during the Indian Wars or moved to Indian Reservations. Even today many Native Americans still live on these Indian Reservations. The movement West displaced many Native Americans from their native homes. They were moved to Reservations that were often a long way from their native land. Not long after Congress herded the Native Americans onto Reservations, Congress enacted The Dawes Severalty Act (February 8, 1887) that deprived them of their legal status.