The U.S. Government used treaties as one means to displace Indians from their
tribal lands, a mechanism that was strengthened with the Removal Act of 1830. In
cases where this failed, the government sometimes violated both treaties and
Supreme Court rulings to facilitate the spread of European Americans westward
across the continent.
Andrew Jackson
As the 19th century began, land-hungry Americans poured into the backcountry of
the coastal South and began moving toward and into what would later become the
states of Alabama and Mississippi. Since Indian tribes living there appeared to
be the main obstacle to westward expansion, white settlers petitioned the
federal government to remove them. Although Presidents
Thomas Jefferson
and
James Monroe
argued that the Indian tribes in the Southeast should exchange their land for
lands west of the Mississippi River, they did not take steps to make this
happen. Indeed, the first major transfer of land occurred only as the result of
war.
In 1814, Major General
Andrew Jackson led an expedition
against the Creek Indians climaxing in the Battle of Horse Shoe Bend (in present
day Alabama near the Georgia border), where Jackson’s force soundly defeated the
Creeks and destroyed their military power. He then forced upon the Indians a
treaty whereby they surrendered to the United States over twenty-million acres
of their traditional land—about one-half of present day Alabama and one-fifth of
Georgia. Over the next decade, Jackson led the way in the Indian removal
campaign, helping to negotiate nine of the eleven major treaties to remove
Indians.
Depiction of William Weatherford surrendering to Andrew Jackson after the
Battle of Horseshoe Bend
Under this kind of pressure, Native American tribes—specifically the Creek,
Cherokee, Chickasaw, and Choctaw—realized that they could not defeat the
Americans in war. The appetite of the settlers for land would not abate, so the
Indians adopted a strategy of appeasement. They hoped that if they gave up a
good deal of their land, they could keep at least some a part of it. The
Seminole tribe in Florida resisted, in the Second Seminole War (1835–1842) and
the Third Seminole War (1855–1858), however, neither appeasement nor resistance
worked.
From a legal standpoint, the United States Constitution empowered Congress to
"regulate commerce with foreign nations, and among the several
States, and with the Indian tribes.” In early treaties negotiated
between the federal government and the Indian tribes, the latter typically
acknowledged themselves “to be under the protection of the United States
of America, and of no other sovereign whosoever.” When Andrew
Jackson became president (1829–1837), he decided to build a systematic approach
to Indian removal on the basis of these legal precedents.
To achieve his purpose, Jackson encouraged Congress to adopt the Removal Act of
1830. The Act established a process whereby the President could grant land west
of the Mississippi River to Indian tribes that agreed to give up their
homelands. As incentives, the law allowed the Indians financial and material
assistance to travel to their new locations and start new lives and guaranteed
that the Indians would live on their new property under the protection of the
United States Government forever. With the Act in place, Jackson and his
followers were free to persuade, bribe, and threaten tribes into signing removal
treaties and leaving the Southeast.
In general terms, Jackson’s government succeeded. By the end of his presidency,
he had signed into law almost seventy removal treaties, the result of which was
to move nearly 50,000 eastern Indians to Indian Territory—defined as the region
belonging to the United States west of the Mississippi River but excluding the
states of Missouri and Iowa as well as the Territory of Arkansas—and open
millions of acres of rich land east of the Mississippi to white settlers.
Despite the vastness of the Indian Territory, the government intended that the
Indians’ destination would be a more confined area--what later became eastern
Oklahoma.
The Trail of Tears (Robert Lindneux, 1942)
The Cherokee Nation resisted, however, challenging in court the Georgia laws that
restricted their freedoms on tribal lands. In his 1831 ruling on Cherokee Nation
v. the State of Georgia, Chief Justice
John Marshall
declared that “the Indian territory is admitted to compose a part of the
United States,” and affirmed that the tribes were “domestic
dependent nations” and “their relation to the United States resembles that
of a ward to his guardian.” However, the following year the Supreme
Court reversed itself and ruled that Indian tribes were indeed sovereign and
immune from Georgia laws. President Jackson nonetheless refused to heed the
Court's decision. He obtained the signature of a Cherokee chief agreeing to
relocation in the Treaty of New Echota, which Congress ratified against the
protests of
Daniel
Webster and
Henry
Clay in 1835. The Cherokee signing party represented only a faction of
the Cherokee, and the majority followed Principal Chief
John
Ross in a desperate attempt to hold onto their land. In response,
Jackson ordered military action in 1838. Under the guns of federal troops and
Georgia state militia, the Cherokee tribe made their trek to the dry plains
across the Mississippi. The best evidence indicates that between three and four
thousand out of the fifteen to sixteen thousand Cherokees died en route from the
brutal conditions of the "Trail of Tears."
With the exception of a small number of Seminoles still resisting removal in
Florida, by the 1840s, from the Atlantic to the
Mississippi, no Indian tribes resided in the American South. Through a
combination of coerced treaties and the contravention of treaties and judicial
determination, the United States Government succeeded in paving the way for the
westward expansion and the incorporation of new territories as part of the
United States.