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Indian Removal in the Age of Jackson |
HTI LESSON PLAN |
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Introduction By the terms of the Indian Intercourse
Act of 1790, Indian land could be acquired by the United States only when
ceded by treaty.
However, peaceful intentions and hopes for the assimilation of
Native Americans yielded to the pressure of westward expansion, which
inevitably shaped Indian policy. This
lesson looks at the process whereby a policy of assimilation gave way to
one of overt removal under President Jackson.
Objectives 1. To
compare the policies toward Native Americans pursued by the presidential
administrations through the Jacksonian era. 2. To
evaluate the impact of assimilation, removal, and resettlement on Native
Americans. Part
1 Students should become familiar with
presidential Indian policy, beginning with Thomas Jefferson’s policy of
acculturation and assimilation. In his
First
Annual Message he endorsed “continued efforts to introduce among them
the implements and the practice of husbandry, and of the household
arts.”
He reiterated this position in his State of the Nation Addresses of
1807
and 1808.
Students should carefully note Jefferson’s
expectation that assimilation would put Indian land into white hands.
Two sites give full texts of Indian
treaties: the first, between Indian nations and the United States; the
second, restricted to treaties with the
Chickasaw and those nations significant to the Chickasaw. For those nations that did not wish to
assimilate, Jefferson offered them removal to territory west of the
Mississippi. Within
two decades, at the insistence of the Georgia, Alabama, and Mississippi
legislatures and the urging of Andrew Jackson, removal became the nation’s
official policy. This
policy had widespread public support among Americans. Students
should read the full text of the Indian
Removal Act of 1830. The debate in the
Senate over removal contains the forceful speeches of Maine Senator
Peleg Sprague and Georgia Senator John Forsyth, against and for removal
respectively.
President Jackson’s First, Second, and Seventh Annual Messages
deal with Indian removal.
The southern states’ efforts to
invalidate federal treaties and open Indian land to whites mounted a
sectional challenge to federal authority; Jackson responded to these state
challenges by pressuring tribes into signing removal treaties. The
Cherokee resisted these efforts and brought suit in court. If teachers
want
to provide a broader context for this challenge, they can visit--or
refer students to-- the Wisconsin Judicare’s Indian Law Office’s
collection of Federal Indian laws. This
collection includes the full text of Supreme Court decisions in Cherokee Nation v. State of Georgia (1831) and Worcester v. State
of Georgia (1832). When
Jackson refused to enforce the Supreme Court decisions that favored the
Cherokee, a tribal faction pushed through the Treaty
of New Echota, which acceded to removal. The
part of Georgia
occupied by the Cherokee in 1830 may be compared with a shockwave
map that shows the antebellum expansion of cotton production. Removal
forts, built in Georgia to house the Cherokee before their journey
west, are listed in this site. An
1836 map shows each tribe’s assigned
lands in Indian Territory.
Another map shows the routes taken by the
southeastern tribes to reach the new lands. Having studied the solidification of
removal policy under Jackson, students may be given an 1833 cartoon to
explicate. “The
Grand National Caravan Moving East” satirizes Jackson’s removal
policy.
Because the caged Indian in the caravan represents the Sauk leader
Black Hawk, ask
the students to explain the ways in which dispossession of tribes in the
Old Northwest compared with that of the five Southeastern tribes. The
students should also account for the incongruous “Rights of Man” banner
and liberty cap atop the cage. Part
2 Introduce students to assimilation
through the Cherokee
alphabet devised by Sequoyah; the Cherokee-language
newspaper; and the 1827 Cherokee
Constitution. Ask
the students to compare and contrast the U.S. and Cherokee
Constitutions. Elias Boudinot, editor of the Cherokee Phoenix, made “An
Address to the Whites” in Philadelphia in 1826. Two
years later, he expressed concern about the mounting
voices that discounted assimilation.
Reaction to removal was considerable and vocal. The Chickasaw Historical
Research page contains letters written by the Chickasaw to U.S.
officials. John Ross of the
Cherokee presented a memorial to Congress protesting removal in 1836.
Students may refer to this site for an account of conditions
on the Trail of Tears, which received this treatment by Robert
Lindneux in 1928. Some
statistics have
been collected for Cherokee leaving under their own supervision.
Addresses delivered by General
Winfield Scott to the troop escorts and to the Cherokee are here. | |
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This lesson has been recreated from an original site for stability reasons only. No changes in the text have been made by the webmasters of this site. The original can be located at http://history.osu.edu/HTI/Lessons/US.htm |