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The Indian Removal Act In The 1830's

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The dispersing of the Indians, particularly the five civilized tribes of the southwest: Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Creek and Seminole fairly began before the approval of the Indian Removal Act. As the European-Americans were progressing the procedure of passing the Act was bound to happen. They were once a secluded society and now forced to a loss of war. The Indian Removal Act was signed on 1830 by President Andrew Jackson. The act allowed President Andrew Jackson to provide the states with federal funds to remove the civilized tribes and reject the Indians from letting them to be part of the European-American society. The Indians did establish schools, develop written language and laws and even became sedentary farmers. Even though they had done all this to become a citizen they were still not recognized. They gave up hunting to adapt the European-American culture. The policy was designed to remove the Native Americans by the American government. The Indian Removal Act was not just created in the 1830’s but was culminated in the nineteenth century. The factors that led President Jackson to pass the act were the finding of the gold in Georgia on Cherokee land and the issue of states’ privileges. …show more content…

President Jackson in his message shows how he hates the Indians by calling them “savages” and does not like how they are different from the European-American people. Also he is contradicting himself because the Indians did attempt to civilize themselves the way that the European- American’s wanted and denied and ignored their

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