Because of the Indian Removal Act of 1830, the Cherokee had to be relocated. Initially, the Cherokee people did not think this really pertain to them. Unfortunately, they were forced to move, anyways. They were not prepared for so many people and hundreds of Cherokee died from starvation, exposure, and illnesses.
Executive branch
The Mandan Indians had to move from their home in the Indian Removal Act
What they got was a forced march to the Oklahoma Territory, caused the Trail of Tears where many of the Cherokee died on the trek to the Oklahoma territory. It was a really bad move on Andrew Jackson's part our 7th President of the United States.
The Cherokee Indians original homeland was in present day northern Georgia and western South Carolina. Small numbers yielded to the encroachment of white settlers and by 1800 a made voluntary move to Arkansas and southern Missouri while a second group found a new home in Tenennessee. The Indian Removal Act of 1830 called for the forced removal of all Indians in the East to the western side of the Mississippi River. From this came the Trail of Tears.White pressure mounted on those who had established communities in Arkansas and from this group the Texas Cherokee made there move to the Republic of Texas or more correctly to Coahuila Mexico.
The act that Congress passed that allowed them to relocate the Native Americans was called the Indian Removal Act. It went in to effect in 1830 when Andrew Jackson was president.
Cherokee and Choctaw
The cherokee
Andrew jacksons policy of implementing the Indian removal act by evicting the Cherokee tribe threatened the constitutional principle of?
Cherokee Nation vs. Georgia
Cherokee's, Seminole's, Creeks, Choctaw's, and Chickasaw's
Indian Removal Act.
No. The Cherokee were forced out by US soldiers after the government passed the Indian Removal Act in 1837.
They moved west on what became known as the Trail of Tears
By calling in the haitian army :D
Those purported Cherokee that signed the treaties involved with the Indian Removal act violated "The Law of the Snake" and they, as well as their families, were executed for it.
The Indian removal act
There was no Indian Removal Act of 1796. In 1796 George Washington began a program of integration with the Cherokee that was fairly successful. In 1830 Congress the law as outlined by Andrew Jackson.