Jackson’s Policy Toward Native Americans Main Idea: During his presidency Native Americans were forced to move west of the Mississippi River, forever changing.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 7, Section 2 Pages  How and why should a country seek to expand its territory?  How should a nation treat regional differences?  Are.
Advertisements

Indian Removal Act (IRA). Objectives: 1. Identify the reasons for Indian removal. 2. Explain why the trip became known as the "Trail of Tears" for the.
Westward Movement Explain how territorial expansion and related land policies affected Native Americans, including their resistance to Americans’ taking.
Andrew Jackson and his Native American policy. If we cannot have a peaceful cohabitation…then we will have a violent co-annihilation -martin luther king.
Jackson’s Policy towards Native Americans
Ch.12, Sec.2 – Jackson’s Policy Toward Native Americans
Chapter 7 Section 3 The Age of Jackson
Indian Removal The Big Idea President Jackson supported a policy of Indian removal. Main Ideas The Indian Removal Act authorized the relocation of Native.
Wednesday, March Update your table of contents DateEntry TitleEntry # 3/19 Politics of the People worksheet 30 3/20Chapter 12 Vocabulary 31 3/21Jackson’s.
Mr. Clifford US 1. MAIN IDEA  Andrew Jackson’s policies spoke for the common people but violated Native American rights. WHY IT MATTERS NOW  The effects.
Chapter 7 Section 3 The Age of Jackson.
Chapter 10, Section 3 Pages 332 – 335. President Andrew Jackson had become famous as an American Indian fighter. He had no sympathy with Native Americans’
Native Americans & White Settlers As the U.S. expanded west, settlers wanted the Native American lands, and the Native Americans didn’t want people taking.
Chapter 12 Section 2 1.Native Americans in the Southeast A. By 1820’s--100,000 Native Americans remained east of the Mississippi 1. Most in the Southeast.
Indian Removal. Cherokee Nation  Some whites hoped Natives would adapt (assimilate) Way to avoid conflict  The Cherokee adapted well to white society.
Removal of Native Americans Balancing Nationalism and Sectionalism Part 5.
INDIAN REMOVAL AND THE TRAIL OF TEARS Indian Removal Act  President Jackson pushes Congress to force Indians to move west of the Mississippi 
Chapter 11, Section 2 Pages Conflicts Over Land.
Chapter 11 Section 2 Conflicts over Land
Moving the Native Americans Native American Resistance
Jackson and the Indians Vs.. Indians in the Southeast By the 1820s, only about 100,000 still lived east of the Mississippi, and most of them were in the.
The Presidency of Andrew Jackson Andrew Jackson and the Common Man? Indian Removal Nullification.
Andrew Jackson and the Indian Removal Act. Before the Presidency Jackson was a General during the War of 1812 –War Hero Battle of Horseshoe Bend –Destruction.
The Trail of Tears Photographs and information from discoveryed. com and pbs.org/teachers.
Andrew Jackson and Indian Removal
JACKSONIAN DEMOCRACY Key events of Andrew Jackson’s Presidential Term.
Ch 12 The Age of Jackson.  During his presidency, Andrew Jackson makes political and economic decisions that strongly affect the nation.
Trail of Tears Image 1 :
Chapter 12 - The Jackson Era
INDIAN REMOVAL ACT & INDIAN WARS. ANDREW JACKSON VS. THE NATIVES By the time Andrew Jackson became President in 1829, the native population east of the.
1 The Age of Jackson. 2 Age of Jackson First president elected after expansion of voting rights allowed people to vote who didn’t own property.
President Andrew Jackson (PT 2) “Bad Andy”. A quick review In part one, we discussed the reasons why many people like Andrew Jackson. He helped open up.
Unit 8: Lecture 2 – The Age of Jackson (Part II) Mr. Smith 8 th grade U.S. History December 6 th & 7 th, 2012.
Native American Removal. Native Removal many supported removing Native Americans  For years, many supported removing Native Americans  About 100,000.
The Age of Jackson Indian Removal Chapter 9 Section 3.
Indian Removal. Cherokee Nation  The Cherokee adapted well to white society  Sequoya’s invention of a system of written language  Drew up a constitution.
Read pages , “Indian Removal Act” in your regular textbook. What was the Indian Removal Act? Law and policy of forcing Native Americans to move.
Politics of the People Chapter 12 sec. 1 & 2. Election of 1824 Due to the sectionalism of the time this becomes one of the most heated and controversial.
Indians in America.  Since 1600, white settlers had pushed Native Americans westward as they took more and more of their land.  By the 1820s, about.
Kahoot Current Events CNN Student News Andrew Jackson Lecture.
INDIAN REMOVAL POLICY By 1820’s, about 100,000 Native Americans remained East of the Mississippi River. Major tribes were Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw,
Native American Policy
12.2 Indian Removal Main Idea During Jackson’s presidency, Native Americans were forced to move west of the Mississippi River. Why It Matters Now This.
Jackson’s Policy Toward Native Americans
Jackson’s Policy towards Native Americans
Chapter 10/ Section 4 Indian Removal.
Indian Removal Act.
The Age of Jackson Chapter 7.3.
Jackson’s Policy Toward Native Americans
Opposition to Jackson led to the formation of the Whig Party and the return of the two-party system.
Trail of Tears PowerPoint & Notes © Erin Kathryn 2015.
The Indian Removal Act.
Trail of Tears PowerPoint & Notes © Erin Kathryn 2015.
Jackson’s Policy Toward Native Americans
The Trail of Tears 1838.
The Presidency of Andrew Jackson
Choctaw, Creek, Chickasaw,
Age of Jackson.
The Indian Removal Act.
Indian Removal For years, many supported removing Native Americans About 100,000 American Indians lived east of the Mississippi River Mainly in.
Andrew Jackson and Indian Removal
The Presidency of Andrew Jackson
Indian Removal Act. Indian Removal Act Andrew Jackson defends the removal policy, 1830 Chief John Ross letter 1835 Sequoyah Letter from John Burnett–
Andrew Jackson – People’s President
Ch : Politics of the People
Chapter 12 The Age of Jackson.
President Andrew Jackson (PT 2)
Jackson’s Policy Towards Native Americans
The Indian Removal Act.
The Presidency of Andrew Jackson
Presentation transcript:

Jackson’s Policy Toward Native Americans Main Idea: During his presidency Native Americans were forced to move west of the Mississippi River, forever changing the lives of Native Americans in the United States.

Andrew Jackson Lawyer/Plantation owner from Tennessee. Lawyer/Plantation owner from Tennessee. Poor childhood, orphaned at 14, voters sympathized with his humble back ground. Poor childhood, orphaned at 14, voters sympathized with his humble back ground. Jacksonian Democracy: The idea of spreading political power to all and ensuring majority rule. Jacksonian Democracy: The idea of spreading political power to all and ensuring majority rule. View on Native American Rights: U.S. had right to regulate where Native Americans lived. View on Native American Rights: U.S. had right to regulate where Native Americans lived.

Native Americans in the Southeast 1800’s- many tribes living in the southeast. Whites hoped: 1. Native Americans would adopt white people’s way of life. 2. Native Americans would move farther west.

Jackson’s Removal Policy Believed Native American Nations should not have their own governments with in the U.S. boarders. Believed Native American Nations should not have their own governments with in the U.S. boarders. Gold discovered in Cherokee land prompted whites to move there. Gold discovered in Cherokee land prompted whites to move there. Laws passed so whites could take their land. Laws passed so whites could take their land. Viewed Native Americans as conquered subjects. Viewed Native Americans as conquered subjects. Indian Removal Act: Required U.S. government to negotiate treaties that made Native Americans relocate to the west. Indian Removal Act: Required U.S. government to negotiate treaties that made Native Americans relocate to the west.

Trail of Tears Indian Territory: Area that covered what is now parts of Oklahoma, Kansas, and Nebraska. Indian Territory: Area that covered what is now parts of Oklahoma, Kansas, and Nebraska. Fall 1831 removal of Indians from the southeast. Fall 1831 removal of Indians from the southeast. Cherokee appealed to the Supreme Court- and won. Cherokee appealed to the Supreme Court- and won. Jackson disregards the ruling. Jackson disregards the ruling. By the Cherokee who remained in the southeast where forcibly removed- the journey became known as the Trail of Tears. By the Cherokee who remained in the southeast where forcibly removed- the journey became known as the Trail of Tears.