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Published byVirginia Cain Modified over 8 years ago
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Pages 209-213
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Election of 1824 Andrew Jackson won majority of popular vote and John Quincy Adams won majority of electoral votes. Went to House and Henry Clay swayed members to vote for Adams. Clay was appointed Adams Secretary of state. Jacksonians (followers of Jackson) formed Democratic Republican Party Opposed national bank and disliked tariffs.
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Free blacks and women couldn’t vote Voting restrictions for white males eased Didn’t have to own property. 1828 over 1 million voters
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1828 election campaign Jackson portrayed himself as a man of humble origins…not an elitist like Adams. Jackson was a wealthy plantation owner. “Old Hickory” won the election in a landslide.
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Said people would only work 4 year terms in federal positions. Fired nearly 10% of federal workers. Filled these positions with his friends. Spoils system – incoming officials throw out former appointees and replace them with their own friends.
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Southeastern tribes adopted white culture. Five Civilized Tribes: Cherokee, Choctaw, Seminole, Creek, and Chickasaw. Cherokee Created a government similar to U.S.A Had constitution Newspaper Miners wanted Native Americans moved so they could use the land to make a profit.
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The Federal government provided funds to negotiate treaties that would force the Native Americans to move west. 90% of treaties were signed. Jackson felt was a good thing because Native Americans would still be able to maintain their way of life.
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1830 pressured the Choctaw to sign a treaty to get them to move out of Mississippi. 1831 ordered U.S. troops to forcibly remove the Sauk and Fox from their lands in Illinois and Missouri. 1832 forced Chickasaw to leave their lands in Alabama and Mississippi.
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Cherokee decided to use the U.S. legal system to help them. Wanted to go to court, but because they were not a foreign nation or a state just a “domestic depended nation” the court didn’t recognize them. Samuel Austin Worcester (missionary) helped them go to court. Worcester v. Georgia 1832 – Court recognized the Cherokee Nation as a distinct political community whose people Georgia was not entitled to regulate by law and whose lands Georgia was not entitled to invade.
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A small group of Cherokee favored relocation and U.S. troops got them to sign a treaty saying they had to relocate. The treaty stated that this small group represented the whole Cherokee Nation. Gave last 8 million acres of Cherokee land to federal government in exchange for around 5 million dollars and land in Oklahoma. 1838 President Martin Van Buren ordered forced removal of 20,000 remaining Cherokee in Georgia to Oklahoma.
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800 mile trip made mostly on foot ¼ of Cherokee died on the journey U.S. soldiers stole money, food, and livestock Known as the Trail of Tears
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