Was The American Indian Justified Essay

758 Words2 Pages

Was the U.S. justified in its treatment of the American Indian?
Ever since the U.S. came there has been conflict between them and the American Indians. The American Indians have lived on this land for centuries without disturbance and in peace, but when a new colony arrived along with it came wars and combat. The Indians settled throughout the country, not harming anyone, but when the white settlers civilization grew and grew they had to force the Indians out of their land, but the Indians would not let them be pushed around and fought back. But the Indians had no chance to win against the guns the white settlers carried. This was not humane and not right to do to these native people.

As time passed on and the U.S. population grew rapidly they started working their way more and more inland to where countless number of Indian tribes still lived in peace. The American Indians would not just let their land be taken over by the white settlers so they put up and fight and was slowly being wiped out one at a time. In 1830, Congress passed the Indian Removal Act, while President Andrew Jackson was in power. This law granted the president make treaties which let natives in …show more content…

In 1836, Creek Indians in Alabama refused to leave their land so they were all rounded up and marched west barefoot and handcuffed. Two years later, over 17,000 Cherokees were unwillingly dragged from their home in Georgia a herd west through the Indian Territory. More than four thousand of these American Indians lost their lives on this terrible journey, with only a little supply of food and water. They walked for hundreds of miles under harsh conditions. Those who survived this terrible journey, called it the Trail of Tears and they said that it was “the cruelest work [he] ever knew”. They were treated terribly just because they lived on their land and we forced to

Open Document