Yes, the Navajo were forcibly removed from their land during a period known as the Long Walk, which occurred between 1863 and 1868. The U.S. government sought to relocate them to a designated reservation in eastern New Mexico. This forced march resulted in significant suffering and loss of life due to harsh conditions. Ultimately, the Navajo were allowed to return to a portion of their ancestral lands, leading to the establishment of the Navajo Nation.
their land
Land of the Navajo - 1925 was released on: USA: 1 March 1925
America got greedy for land and so the land that they had wasn't enough for them so they made the Indians leave their land by torching the Indians that refused to leave the land!!!!!!!!!!
navajo
The white people wanted to have the lands all to themselves so they were forced out.
Andrew Jackson forced Indians to move in 1830
Dinetah
They take the Navajo Indian's land
The child can has to be 18 before they are forced to leave home
They had some fights with the Navajo and Apache. Though the main enemy was the apache.
Georgian farmers discovered gold there, and they "needed" land to grow cotton. President Jackson refused to enforce the laws passed by the supreme court saying that we had to leave the Natives alone. Later Jacksons supporters pushed the Indian Removal Act, which forced Natives to move west, passed the mississippi.
Marsha Weisiger has written: 'Dreaming of sheep in Navajo country' -- subject(s): History, Navajo Indians, Land tenure, Land use, Domestic animals