Indian Removal Act
the Indian removal act
Indian Removal Act
Trade on the Mississippi river was controlled by the French and Native Americans. The Mississippi river is 2,350 miles long.
Indian removal act
They went to Mississippi River Valley to convert Native Americans to Catholicism but did not try to change their customs.
he believed that the government had the power to tell native Americans where they could live
Jackson's position was thathe wanted the Native Americans to be in conflict with the white settlers on the West side of the Mississippi River
Indian Removal Act.
Jackson wanted native American Indians moved to the west of the Mississippi River to make room for American settlements and avoid conflict. It also gave America better access to the fruits of the Mississippi river and its use as a mode of transportation.
Mississippi
Trade on the Mississippi river was controlled by the French and Native Americans. The Mississippi river is 2,350 miles long.
Indian removal act
Mississippi River, Minnesota River, and the Zumbro River
They went to Mississippi River Valley to convert Native Americans to Catholicism but did not try to change their customs.
west of the Mississippi river
Native Americans called the mighty Mississippi river the father of waters.
Jackson created the Trail of Tears, which removed all the Native Americans to the west of the Mississippi River
It moved the Native American's south east of the Mississippi river
The native Americans who where using the river for transportation and everyday life like their chief did.