The Cherokee Removal Policy: Motives and Impacts

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In 1838 and 1839, the Removal Policy took effect in the state of Georgia. The Removal Policy required the Cherokee Indians to emigrate from their Southeast homeland to the Indian Territory, which is now Oklahoma. They moved to new lands west of Mississippi because those lands were unexplored and deemed unsuitable for European settlement. For Europeans, Oklahoma was the perfect place to move the Native Americans. Obviously, there were reasons behind Europeans’ decisions. Europeans desired more land for their growing population. Another reason is the discovery of gold in northern Georgia. Europeans sought to take advantage of all the resources Georgia had. Also, during this period, Andrew Jackson was elected as the president. Andrew Jackson helped …show more content…

They went above and beyond their ways to acquire land. Nothing and no one stopped them. Their drive to gain land and greed ultimately led them to become killing machines. Andrew Jackson portrayed a great example of European greed. Before Andrew Jackson became the president, he supported the Native Americans. However, things changed. Suddenly, when gold was discovered down in Georgia, tables turned. Jackson called for the United States to end the absurdity of negotiating with the Native Americans as sovereign nations. In 500 Nations, one of Jackson’s famous quotes was “Build a fire around the Cherokees. When it gets hot enough, they will move” (Leustig, 1995). He argued that the Native Americans’ survival depended on separation from whites. In his letter, To the Cherokee Tribe of Indians East of the Mississippi, Jackson stated “Listen to me, therefore, while I tell you that you cannot remain where you now are… You have but one remedy within your reach. And that is, to remove to the West and join your countrymen” (Jackson, 1835). This document worsens the more it reaches to the end. The Cherokees felt betrayed and hurt. The most hurt were the Cherokees who fought under and alongside Jackson’s army in past wars, such as the War of 1812. Once Jackson changed, the plan for the removal …show more content…

Converting some Native Americans to Christianity was not enough. Europeans assimilated Native Americans. The Cherokees were known as the most civilized Native Americans. They were influenced and educated in American schools. U.S. officials began to urge them to abandon hunting and their traditional ways of life and to instead learn how to live, worship, and farm like an American yeomen. They even established a court system, formally abandoned the law of blood revenge, and adopted a republican government (Garrison, 2015). They flourished in and around the Smoky Mountains in Tennessee, Georgia and their bordering states. After influencing the Cherokees, the Georgia legislature prolonged the state 's authority over Cherokee territory, passed laws asserting to abolish the Cherokee government, and began the process of seizing the Cherokees’ land. Europeans refused to accept the Cherokee people as social equals. One of the Cherokee chiefs who tried to break the removal policy was John Ross. Though he was only one-eighth Cherokee by blood, he fought for the Cherokees. The court, however, ignored the Cherokees’ grievances. Georgia held lottery for the Cherokee lands. In late spring of 1838, the removal treaty took effect and the infamous Trail of Tears took

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