How Did Andrew Jackson Indian Removal

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Andrew Jackson was born in March 25, 1767. He grew up poor and his father died before he was born. His home was in Waxhaws, a place where there were battles between the Native Americans and the whites. His mother eventually moved into her brother-in-law’s house and work as a maid there. Jackson was known for being short-tempered and getting in trouble many times. When he was 13, Jackson and Robert, his brother, volunteered to join the military and were captured by the British in a war. While he was in prison, a British soldier ordered him to clean his boots, but Jackson refused. The soldier took out his sword and cut his head and left hand deeply, giving him scars for the rest of his life. In the war, Robert died of smallpox while in the prison, …show more content…

In 1814, Andrew Jackson, now a Major General, led an expedition against the Creek Indians in what is now Alabama near the Georgia border. The Creeks were easily defeated and were forced to sign a treaty that surrendered over twenty-million acres of their land to the United States (about half of what is now Alabama). General Jackson then led a campaign of Indian removal and over the next ten years negotiating nine of the eleven major removal treaties. With the intense military might and many easy victories, white people started to believe that the land belonged to them and not the Indians. The white people wanted the Indians’ land because it was fertile land for farming and had gold deposits for money. . When the regular white miner reached the land, they were expecting to get half million dollars in gold, but they got less than five dollars a day from gold alone. The government would force the Indians off their land and sell it to the whites. The Indians would demand a treaty from the government, which the government would make, ignore, and force more land off the Indians. The Indians would once again demand a treaty, and the same results would happen. Andrew Jackson with a history of thinking that removing Indians form their native land and moving them away, even at gunpoint; eventually decided to sign the Indian Removal Act when he became president. It forced …show more content…

It could also be from how he grew up in a place where there were fights between the Indians and the white people. In the Indian Removal Act, the white people would take over the land and move five Indian Tribes into different areas of Oklahoma. They believed that if they did this, they could help the Indians by leading them to a place where there were no wars against other tribes, adapt to the white culture, and lead them to a more civilized life where the Indians weren’t a threat to the whites. They also tried to do this so that they could take over the Indian land, since there would be no more Indians to stop them if they were all in Oklahoma. The Indian Removal Act led to the tribes having to die over moving to the resettlement area, and the trail where the most people died is called the Trail of Tears. The Trail of Tears was the trail where the Cherokee had to go through. They went through hot summers and cold winters, but us Americans didn’t care because we thought we were helping the

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