All throughout the United State’s existence, Americans have believed in common ideals on which our beloved nation should be based. After America’s first failed attempt at a solid government, the Articles of Confederation, the Founding Fathers came together and drafted the Constitution in order to correct some of our original ideals. Still to this day, the Constitution is considered “the supreme law of the land”, but now with a few more amendments. These amendments were adopted in order to patch up some of the stray ideals that had been twisted over the years. Some of these ideals that the United States did not fulfill included Rights, Equality, and Opportunity.
America did not fulfill the ideal of Rights throughout this time period due to the fact that women’s rights were oppressed. One of these rights included women’s suffrage. In the Declaration of Sentiments it states that “He has never
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Robert Lindneux painting, Trail of Tears, depicts this unequal opportunity quite well showing miles of Cherokee Indians traveling along a narrow, treacherous road after being expelled from their ancestral homelands as a part of Andrew Jackson's Indian removal policy. These migrants faced hunger, disease, and exhaustion, which eventually killed around 4,000 of the original 15,000 Cherokees. This migration of the Indians was caused by the colonists greed and desire own the Indians fertile and prime land located in Georgia, Alabama, North Carolina, Florida, and Tennessee. These colonist’s greed led them to steal Indian livestock; loot and burn their houses and towns; as well as establish property on their land. To make matters worse, the State governments joined the colonists in this effort to drive Native Americans out of the South by passing laws to limit the Indians rights. These laws violated and prohibited the Indians from being prosperous in “the land of the
( A Soldier Recalls the Trail of Tears, 1838-39) " The long painful journey to the west ended March 26th, 1839, with four-thousand silent graves reaching from the foothills of the Smokey Mountains to what is known as Indian territory in the west. And covetousness on the part of the white race was the cause of all that the Cherokees had to suffer." A white soldier tells the journey of the natives as long and painful because of the natives being forced against their will to leave their homes forever killing four thousand natives. President Jackson didn’t contemplate the natives life's because all he wanted was more land for the U.S..
On their way there they had faced many cons and had lost many of their families that either died of disobeying Congress or of sickness from traveling on foot or traveling on water. This harsh and inhumane action of them traveling so far for land was called The Trail of Tears. Many things had happened when the Cherokee were forced to move from their land. When they were told to move some Indians left respectfully and many did not. Most stayed for their land which was passed by Andrew Jackson to move and force the Indians away.
This law only allowed the government to negotiate fairly for the exchange of this land but Jackson and the military forces consistently ignored this facet of the act and forced the natives out of their land. The next year the Choctaw were forced under threat of
The Trail of Tears was a horrible and genocidal act towards the “civilized tribes'' of the southern regions. The Trail of Tears was an act for western expansion put into effect by Andrew Jackson in his “Indian Removal Act''. Jackson wanted to continue western expansion by any means necessary and thus the trail of tears was set into motion in the early 1830s. The Trail of Tears was overall a dreadful act of forced displacement, ethnic cleansing, and unwarranted death towards the Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Creek, and Seminole tribes. Americans were focused on western expansion in the name of manifest destiny, they thought that god wanted them to have the land.
The ideals of the Declaration were not fulfilled because women did not have equal political or social rights. According to
The Trail of Tears was a cold hearted crime committed against innocent people in order to obtain the riches of the land the Native Americans had settled upon. The Native American’s refusal to leave resulted in the death of around 4,000 Cherokee people due to hunger, disease and long exposure to the cold. The Trail of Tears was the greatest crime against the indigenous people. The Trail of Tears began when President Andrew Jackson authorized the removal of the Indian removal act of 1830.
Between 1838 until 1839, 100,000 Native Americans took the journey west on what is now known as The Trail of Tears. The Trail of Tears was a tragic event in American history, involving the forced removal of many Native American tribes from their ancestral lands east of the Mississippi River and migration to what is now present-day Oklahoma. Affecting Cherokee, Choctaw, Chickasaw, Creek, and Seminole tribes, they suffered with hunger, disease, and exhaustion, which resulted in the deaths of 4,000 people along the way. It had profound impacts on their cultures, communities, and ways of life. In this essay, we will explore the background, causes, and significance of the Trail of Tears.
The Trail of Tears commonly refers to a series of forced relocations of Native American nations in the United States following the Indian Removal Act of 1830. The removal included members of the Cherokee, Muscogee, Seminole, Chickasaw, and Choctaw nations, who chose not to absorb American society, from their ancestral homelands in the southeastern U.S. to an area west of the Mississippi River that had been designated as Indian Territory. Native Americans who chose to stay and absorb the American society were allowed to become citizens in their states and of the U.S. The phrase "Trail of Tears" originated from a description of the removal of the Choctaw Nation in 1831. Evidence from Research: Many Native Americans suffered from exposure, disease, and starvation while going on the route to their destinations, many died, around 2,000-6,000 of the 16,543 relocated Cherokee.
Numbers of Cherokee families were evicted from their homes by American soldiers and forced to the Trail of Tears. The Trail of Tears became a disease infested place full of smallpox and cholera. More than 2,000 Cherokees died. However, this tragedy can be positive. Jackson wanted western expansion because it would allow America to become powerful and safe from enemy invaders.
The Trail of Tears is a dark period in American history, referring to the forced relocation of Native American tribes from their ancestral lands in the southeastern United States to Indian Territory in present-day Oklahoma in the 1830s. This relocation was part of the Indian Removal Act of 1830, signed into law by President Andrew Jackson, which aimed to clear the way for white settlement of these lands. The Trail of Tears was a traumatic event that led to the deaths of thousands of Native Americans, and had long-lasting effects on their communities and cultures. One of the most heavily impacted tribes during the Trail of Tears was the Cherokee Nation. In 1835, a small group of Cherokees signed the Treaty of New Echota, which ceded all Cherokee lands in the southeastern United States to the federal government in exchange for land in Indian Territory.
Some Indians relocated peacefully, while most resisted. The Cherokee Indians were a particularly difficult tribe to relocate because they demanded to stay in Georgia. Eventually, the Cherokees settled to sell the land to the federal government for $5 million dollars. The relocation of Cherokee Indians became known as the Trail of Tears, where 4,000 Indians died because of the mistreatment of the Indians while relocating. While relocating, the military that was supposed to escort the Cherokees would take their blankets and food to sell for profit (Jones, 290).
Under influence of president Andrew Jackson, the congress was urged in 1830 to pass the Indian Removal Act, with the goal of relocated many Native Americans in the East territory, the west of Mississippi river. The Trail of tears was made for the interest of the minorities. Indeed, if president Jackson wished to relocate the Native Americans, it was because he wanted to take advantage of the gold he found on their land. Then, even though the Cherokee won their case in front the supreme court, the president and congress pushed them out(Darrenkamp).
When they finally reached the new Indian Territory, John Ross sought revenge on those who betrayed their tribe. Along with his men, Chief Ross murdered everyone who signed the treaty with President Jackson that gave up rights to their land for money. The Trail of Tears is one of the most remembered tragedies that happened in the history of the American Indians. The Cherokees, as well as other tribes, remembered that journey as the “the place where we cried.” (Dwyer) Today, that journey is remembered as the “Trail of Tears.”
The Genocide: Trail of Tears/ The Indian removal act During the 1830s the united states congress and president Andrew Jackson created and passed the “Indian removal act”. Which allowed Jackson to forcibly remove the Indians from their native lands in the southeastern states, such as Florida and Mississippi, and send them to specific “Indian reservations” across the Mississippi river, so the whites could take over their land. From 1830-1839 the five civilized tribes (The Cherokee, Choctaw, Seminole, and Chickasaw) were forced, sometimes by gun point, to march about 1,000 miles to what is present day Oklahoma.
Susan B. Anthony, a woman who was arrested for illegally voting in the president election of 1872, in her “On Women's Right to Vote” speech, argues that women deserve to be treated as citizens of America and be able to vote and have all the rights that white males in America have. She begins by introducing her purpose, then provides evidence of how women are citizens of America, not just males by using the preamble of the Constitution, then goes on about the how this problem has became a big problem and occurs in every home in the nation, and finally states that women deserve rights because the discrimination against them is not valid because the laws and constitutions give rights to every CITIZEN in America. Anthony purpose is to make the woman of America realize that the treatment and limitations that hold them back are not correct because they are citizens and they deserve to be treated like one. She adopts a expressive and confident tone to encourage and light the hearts of American woman. To make her speech effective, she incorporates ethos in her speech to support her claims and reasons.