Dbq Indian Removal Analysis

802 Words2 Pages

The United States passed the Indian Removal Policy in 1830 under the administration of Andrew Jackson. This policy allowed the presidential office to negotiate removal treaties with any tribes living east of the Mississippi River (Calloway, Ch 5, 271). Although the policy was passed under Jackson, the removal idea had its origins during Thomas Jefferson’s presidency. Jefferson hoped to solve the “Indian Problem” by taking Indian lands and “determining that too much land was a disincentive for Indians to become civilized,” (Calloway, Ch 5, 266). One of the government’s motives was to free up land for settlers who would trespass into Native land anyway (266). Americans forced Native Americans to sign treaty after treaty, ceding their land and …show more content…

The quote continues on to explain all of the adjustments and concessions that the Cherokee had made in order to appease the American government, including becoming agriculturalists, worshiping a Christian god, and developing literacy compatible to Americans. However, all of these efforts were not enough for the Americans to let them remain in their homeland in peace. After conferring with only a small number of Cherokee people, the United States managed to get a treaty signed to move the tribe west (Calloway, Ch 5, 272). As showcased on Map 5.3, the Cherokees were forced out of their land in northern Georgia and other surrounding states (Calloway, Ch 5, 273). They were brutally marched through parts of Tennessee, Kentucky, Illinois, and Missouri until finally, they arrived in Oklahoma. This did not come without casualties as the Cherokee lost around one-fourth of its population on the Trail of Tears (273). It would be impossible to name all of the effects on the Cherokee that this traumatic event caused. To name one, the Cherokee people were put in a state of chaos and revenge that led to the murders of the Treaty

Open Document