Creek & Cherokee INDIAN REMOVAL.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Indian Removal. Background Near the end of the 18 th century, Georgia was home to European settlers, as well as Cherokee and Creek Indians. Many settlers.
Advertisements

President Andrew Jackson The Trail of Tears
Chapter 10, Section 3 Indian Removal.
D- Analyze Creeks and Cherokee removal, specifically the roles of: Alexander McGillvray, William McIntosh, Sequoya, John Ross, Dahlonega Gold Rush, Worcester.
Native American Removal from Georgia October 1, 2012.
Native American Removal from Georgia October 1, 2012.
Native American Removal from Georgia
Indian Removal. Cherokee Nation  Some whites hoped Natives would adapt (assimilate) Way to avoid conflict  The Cherokee adapted well to white society.
Conflict over Indian Lands
CHAPTER 10 NATIVE AMERICAN REMOVAL & THE WAR OF
Moving the Native Americans Native American Resistance
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.
Removal of the Creek and Cherokee from Georgia
Andrew Jackson and Indian Removal
Georgia Studies Unit 3: Revolution, Statehood, and Westward Expansion
Unit 6: Growth & Expansion. Sometimes called Muscogee Indians Wanted to fight to preserve land. lived in mound building societies along large rivers,
Georgia Studies Unit 3: Revolution, Statehood, and Westward Expansion Lesson 5: Indian Removal Study Presentation.
Native American Removal. Native Removal many supported removing Native Americans  For years, many supported removing Native Americans  About 100,000.
Indian Removal. Cherokee Nation  The Cherokee adapted well to white society  Sequoya’s invention of a system of written language  Drew up a constitution.
The Creek Indian Removal. Rising Conflict: The Oconee War Late 1700s - white pioneer settlers push into Creek lands along the Oconee River Alexander McGillvray.
Alexander McGillivary Creek Chief Signed the Treaty of New York that gave away the Creek land east of the Oconee River. Promised no white settlers west.
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.
Native American Policy
Economic Growth & Indian Removal
Jackson’s Policy towards Native Americans
“Walk” the Trail of Tears
Native Americans in Georgia
Creeks and Cherokees Native Americans had hunted in Georgia’s forests and fished its streams and rivers for ten thousand years. The fifty-five years from.
HISTORY MYSTERY: TRAIL OF TEARS
Create a graphic organizer that will allow you to take notes on the concepts in the GPS. (5 Minutes) SS8H5 The student will explain significant factors.
Trail of Tears PowerPoint & Notes © Erin Kathryn 2015.
Chapter 9 Section 3 Indian Removal.
Georgia Studies Unit 4 – Georgia and the Westward Expansion
President Andrew Jackson The Trail of Tears
Trail of Tears PowerPoint & Notes © Erin Kathryn 2015.
Unit 6: Growth & Expansion
President Jackson supported a policy of Indian removal.
New Technologies CLOZE Notes
1. The Creek (also called Muscogee) 2. The Cherokee
Conflicts Over Land Chapter 10, Section 4.
Unit 5: Growth & Expansion
HISTORY MYSTERY: TRAIL OF TEARS
Conflicts Over Land Chapter 10, Section 4.
Indian Removal.
Native Americans in Georgia
Conflicts Over Land Section Two.
Georgia’s Expansion and the Trail of Tears.
People and Events of Indian Removal
Creek & Cherokee INDIAN REMOVAL © Brain Wrinkles.
Terms and People Worchester vs. Georgia – The Supreme Court declared that Georgia’s law (which made Native Americans give up their land) had no force within.
Indian Removal For years, many supported removing Native Americans About 100,000 American Indians lived east of the Mississippi River Mainly in.
The Age of Jackson, : Indian Removal
Georgia’s Native Nation

Georgia’s Native Nation
Unit 6: Growth & Expansion
Westward Expansion and American Indians in Georgia
OneSheet Start project
Thinking Question Describe your “home”.
Conflicts Over Land Section Two.
Indian Removal Act Trail of Tears
Cherokee Indian Removal
In the United States of America, are all men created equal?
In the United States of America, are all men created equal?
Georgia Studies Unit 3: Revolution, Statehood, and Westward Expansion
HISTORY MYSTERY: TRAIL OF TEARS
In the United States of America, are all men created equal?
Georgia’s Native Nation
Creek & Cherokee INDIAN REMOVAL © Brain Wrinkles.
Unit 6: Growth & Expansion
Presentation transcript:

Creek & Cherokee INDIAN REMOVAL

Removal of the CREEKS

Allies During the Revolutionary War, many American Indians in Georgia fought as allies of the British. The British promised to return land taken by white settlers if Britain won the war. However, once the war was over, Georgians desired to push American Indians out.

Creeks The Creek Nation was prominent in southwestern Georgia and was the most populous tribe in the state. Many white Georgians desired the land the Creek used for deer hunting, so they pushed for Indian removal. In 1790, the Treaty of York forced the Creek to cede the land east of the Ocmulgee River to the government.

Land When Georgia ceded the Yazoo Lands to the federal government in 1802, the US government agreed to remove the American Indians still in Georgia. In 1823, Governor George Troup pressured the federal government to drive the Creeks from their remaining land. They negotiated with Troup’s first cousin, Creek chief William McIntosh, who was the son of a Scottish officer and a Creek woman.

Chief William McIntosh

McIntosh William McIntosh angered Creeks by siding often with the US government over matters of Indian land. He also believed it was best for American Indians to assimilate to the ways of white men. McIntosh was in favor of changing the traditional Creek lifestyle to one of agricultural production and slaveholding. Most Creeks did not support his abandonment of their customs.

Removal McIntosh signed the Treaty of Indian Springs in 1825, which gave up all Creek lands to the government of Georgia. Many Creeks were enraged with McIntosh and a 200-warrior war party murdered him and several other leaders who had signed the treaty. Nevertheless, by 1827, the Creeks were removed from Georgia and relocated to the wilderness across the Mississippi River.

Indian Cessions in Georgia

Removal of the CHEROKEE

Cherokee Georgia’s other main American Indian tribe was the Cherokee, who lived in northwest Georgia. They created an advanced society with a constitution and an independent government.

Cherokee Nation

Cherokee Constitution

John Ross In 1791, the U.S. government signed a treaty guaranteeing that the Cherokee nation could be independent and have its own government. The Cherokee government was modeled after the U.S. federal government and was led by Chief John Ross. He was the son of a Scottish father and part-Cherokee, part-Scottish mother.

Cherokee Chief John Ross

Gold Rush In 1828, white Georgians began lobbying for Cherokee removal from the state. Around this time, gold was discovered in the region and pretty much sealed the deal on the Cherokee losing their land. The Dahlonega Gold Rush brought thousands of settlers who put more and more pressure on the Cherokee to move.

The discovery of gold in Dahlonega hastened the removal of the Cherokee from Georgia.

The government had to set up a mint to produce gold coins because so much gold was found.

New Laws In 1828, Georgia lawmakers said that state laws were now in effect in the Cherokee lands. The General Assembly began passing laws denying the Cherokee rights to both the land and gold. In 1830, Congress passed the Indian Removal Act which ordered all Indians east of the Mississippi River to leave their homes and move west.

Supreme Court The Cherokee nation fought the removal and chief John Ross argued their case before the US Supreme Court. In 1832, Chief Justice John Marshall ruled in favor of the Cherokee in Worcester v. Georgia. The decision declared that the Cherokee Nation was a sovereign nation and did not need to obey Georgia or US laws.

Chief Justice John Marshall

Jackson President Andrew Jackson was frustrated by the decision and chose to ignore it. He believed firmly in Indian removal and wanted to get the Cherokee out of Georgia. By not enforcing the Supreme Court ruling, Jackson did not meet his Constitutional requirements as president.

President Andrew Jackson

Not Enforced Worcester v. Georgia should have protected Cherokee lands from white settlement. Because it was not enforced by President Jackson, nothing was done to protect the Cherokee and Georgians continued to settle on Cherokee land.

Removal In 1835, the US government forced the Cherokee to sign a treaty giving up all of their lands in Georgia. In 1838, the US Army forcibly rounded up 14,000 Cherokee men, women, and children. The troops forced the Cherokee on a 800-mile march across the Southeast to Indian territory in Oklahoma.

Trail of Tears More than 4,000 men, women, and children died from disease, starvation, and exposure to the cold weather during the six-month trek. The Cherokee called it the “trail where they cried”. Today, it is known as the Trail of Tears.

Georgia’s Indian Removal Vocabulary - KEY William McIntosh Creek chief who was murdered after ceding Creek land to Georgia John Ross Cherokee chief who argued Worcester v. Georgia case before the Supreme Court John Marshall Chief Justice of the Supreme Court in Worcester v. Georgia; ruled in favor of Cherokee Indians Andrew Jackson US President who ignored the Supreme Court ruling in Worcester v. Georgia; favored Indian removal from Georgia Dahlonega Gold Rush Gold discovered in north Georgia brought many new settlers; eventually led to the removal of Cherokee in Georgia Indian Removal Act Congress ordered all Indians east of the Mississippi River to leave their homes and move west of the river Worcester v. Georgia Supreme Court ruled that the Cherokee Nation was subject to its own law, not those of Georgia Trail of Tears US troops rounded 14000 American Indians and forced them on a 6-month march across the Southeast; over 4000 were killed along the way ©