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Indian Removal Act
(redirected from Indian Removal Act of 1830)

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Indian Removal Act

US federal act signed by President Andrew Jackson on 28 May 1830 empowering him to offer land in Indian Territory to all American Indians situated east of the Mississippi River, in exchange for their lands there. Most northern American Indian peoples, except the Iroquois, were peacefully relocated, but the Five Civilized Tribes in the southeast refused. The Cherokees successfully challenged the removal laws in the US Supreme Court in 1832, but the ruling was ignored by President Andrew Jackson. The Florida Seminoles fought relocation for seven years in the second Seminole Wars 1835–42. Nearly 100,000 American Indians were forcibly relocated and between a quarter and a third died during the journey and resettlement. Tennessee Senator Davy Crockett was among those who spoke out against the Act.

The western expansion of settlers in the eastern and southern US states in the last decades of the 18th century and the first decades of the 19th brought the settlers into increasing conflict with American Indians living there. Georgia's population increased six-fold 1790–1830, and tensions grew when gold was discovered in Georgia in 1828. The Indian Removal Act was passed because it was felt that ‘no state could achieve proper culture, civilization, and progress, as long as Indians remained within its boundaries.’ Today 90% of all American Indians live west of the Mississippi.



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Produced and directed by Chip Richie, The Trail Of Tears: Cherokee Legacy is an engaging two hour documentary exploring one of America's darkest periods in which President Andrew Jackson's Indian Removal Act of 1830 consequently transported Native Americans of the Cherokee Nation to the bleak and unsupportive Oklahoma Territory in the year 1838.
Her study centers on the century starting with the Indian Removal Act of 1830 through the Dawes Act of 1887 that granted reservation land to individual tribesmen, to the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934 that returned certain land to Indian tribes.
One possible source for Melville's subject is a young Choctaw clerk hired in 1818 by Thomas McKenney, one--time director of the office of Indian Affairs who became the principal designer of the Indian Removal Act of 1830.
 
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