If by "discouraged their removal" you mean as in the European settlers not wanting them to go.. then there is almost nothing that was discouraging about their removal to the colonials. Gold in Georgia and Tennessee were considered far more valuable then native American lives. But to the Cherokees, they were being forcefully removed from their sacred land, where generation upon generation has hunted, fished, lived, and died.
President Andrew Jackson!
Andrew Jackson's Indian Removal Act of 1830. In the case of Cherokee Nation v. Georgia, Supreme court ruled in favor of cherokees. they could keep their land. Jackson didnt care and ignored the judgment of SUPREME COURT and forced the cherokees to oklahoma (trail of tears)
The Choctaws didn't have enough tents , shoes , food , blankets and winter clothes . heavy rain and snow caused enormous suffering. they walked for 24 barefoot through the show and ice before reaching shelter. The Cherokees held out a few years longer. they were forced to march hundreds of miles. they had little food and shelter. Many did not survive. Of 15,000 cherokees who began the trip , 4,000 died along the way.
Andrew Jackson was president at the time, and he said that if the Cherokees wished to give up their tribal ways, and basically assimilate and live as whiles did he would not want to relocate them. Other tribes had more or less made this transition, such as the Tuscarora and the Catawbas, and they were not removed. Jackson felt that so long as the Cherokees wished to maintain their status as a separate nation, increasingly in contact with and even partially surrounded by white settlement, that there could never be permanent peace. Jackson grew up in North Carolina and moved to Tennessee as a young man, and never forgot that the Cherokees were on the wrong side in the Revolution and in the French and Indian War before that. Much is made of the fact that the Cherokee chief Junaluska saved Jackson's life at the Battle of Horseshoe Bend during the Creek Indian War, when the Cherokees were fighting as allies of the US Army. But the Cherokees involved themselves in that war because the Creeks were their ancient enemy, not because they wanted to help the whites. And whatever else may be said of Jackson's policy of Indian Removal, it did in fact bring an end to Indian warfare in the southeastern US, after more than 200 years.
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becuase they belived that the land was rightfully thiers and hd lived there all their lives.
the Removal Act of 1830
Trail of Tears
Cherokees
It was the removal of the cherokees.
President Andrew Jackson!
Hi
they had learned about the american legal system
depends what people but one example is the Jews by the Romans
Some people are racists
The slave trade
Which group was most hurt by Jackson removal policy indians being removed from their homelands