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President Jackson
"The decision of the Jackson administration to remove the
Cherokee Indians to lands west of the Mississippi River in the
1830's was more a reformulation of the national policy that had
been in effect since the 1790's than a change in that policy."
The dictum above is firm and can be easily proved by examining
the administration of Jackson and comparison to the traditional
course which was carried out for about 40 years. After 1825 the
federal government attempted to remove all eastern Indians to the
Great Plains area of the Far West. The Cherokee Indians of
northwestern Georgia, to protect themselves from removal, made up
a constitution which said that the Cherokee Indians were
sovereign and not subject to the laws of Georgia. When the
Cherokee sought help from the Congress that body only allotted
lands in the West and urged them to move. The Supreme Court,
however, in Worcester vs. Georgia, ruled that they constituted a
"domestic dependent nation" not subject to the laws of Georgia.
Jackson, who sympathized with the frontiersman, was so outraged
that he refused to enforce the decision. Instead he persuaded the
tribe to give up it's Georgia lands for a reservation west of
Approximate Word count = 1394
Approximate Pages = 6 (250 words per page double spaced)
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