US History Ch 12.4

20
U.S. History Chapter 12: A New National Identity Section 4: Indian Removal

Transcript of US History Ch 12.4

Page 1: US History Ch 12.4

U.S. History

Chapter 12: A New National IdentitySection 4: Indian Removal

Page 2: US History Ch 12.4

The Black Hawk War

• 1827: officials order removal of Indians from Illinois

• Sauk leader Black Hawk ignores order

Black Hawk

Page 3: US History Ch 12.4

The Black Hawk War

• 1830: Returning from winter hunt, Sauk find village overtaken by white settlers

• Attacks on settlements & U.S. troops

• August 1832: running low on food & supplies, Black Hawk surrenders

Page 4: US History Ch 12.4

Indian Removal Act

• American Indians lived in Southeast

• Desire to open land to settlement

• Indian Removal Act—authorized the removal of American Indians who lived east of the Mississippi River

Page 5: US History Ch 12.4

Indian Removal Act

•Indian Territory—area of land containing most of present-day Oklahoma

Map of Indian Territory

Page 6: US History Ch 12.4

Indian Removal Act

• Bureau of Indian Affairs—federal agency that oversaw policy directed towards American Indians

Page 7: US History Ch 12.4

Indian Removal Act

• Choctaw first Indians sent to Indian Territory

• Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek—over 10 million acres of Choctaw land was ceded to the state of Mississippi

• Disastrous removal during Winter 1831-32 (1/4 died)

Page 8: US History Ch 12.4

Indian Removal Act

•Other Indians resist

•1836: federal troops remove Creek from Alabama

•1837-38: Chickasaw removed from Mississippi

Page 9: US History Ch 12.4

The Cherokee Nation

• Cherokee believed they could prevent conflict by adopting white culture

• Invited missionaries to establish schools

• Children learned to write/speak English

Page 10: US History Ch 12.4

The Cherokee Nation

• No written Indian language

• Sequoyah: produced a Cherokee writing system Sequoyah

Page 11: US History Ch 12.4

The Cherokee Nation

•Cherokee Phoenix newspaper

•Created government inspired by U.S. Constitution

Page 12: US History Ch 12.4

Trail of Tears

•Gold discovered in Cherokee land in Georgia

•Cherokee refuse to move

•Georgia militia attack Cherokee towns

Page 13: US History Ch 12.4

Trail of Tears

• Cherokee sue state

• Cherokee claim: Independent nation & that Georgia had no legal power within their territory

• 1832: Worchester v. Georgia

Page 14: US History Ch 12.4

“…[the Cherokee nation] is a distinct community, occupying its own territory,…in which the laws of Georgia have no force.”

--Chief Justice John Marshall

Page 15: US History Ch 12.4

“John Marshall has made his decision; now let him enforce it.”

--Andrew Jackson

Page 16: US History Ch 12.4

Trail of Tears

• 1838: U.S. troops begin to remove Cherokee to Indian Territory

• Georgia took farms, businesses property

• “Trail of Tears”: ¼ of the 18,000 Cherokee on the march died

Page 17: US History Ch 12.4
Page 18: US History Ch 12.4

The Second Seminole War

• 1832: Seminole leaders forced to sign treaty

– Agree to leave Florida within three years

– Seminoles of African ancestry would be considered runaway slaves

Page 19: US History Ch 12.4

The Second Seminole War

•Osceola: called upon the Seminole to resist removal by forceOsceola

Page 20: US History Ch 12.4

The Second Seminole War

• Second Seminole War

• 1837: Osceola captured, dies in prison

• 1500 soldiers died, millions of dollars spent

• U.S. gives up fight