The Indian Removal Act and the Trail of Tears Harvard Case Solution & Analysis

Native Americans have been subjected to a long and painful process of forced eviction from their lands. Housing provides "first-hand" information about the debate on Indian removal, as was the case in the early nineteenth century. The first document is an excerpt of the first annual Andrew Jackson's Message to Congress in 1829 and the second in a second annual report of Jackson in 1830, when the Indian Removal Act was passed. The third and fourth documents cover Congressional debate over the relocation of Indians, which led to a strong partisan divisions and differences between North and South. The document was taken from three Whig Senator Theodore Frelinghuysen six o'clock speech in New Jersey in Congress opposed Indian removal. The document was taken from four speeches of Senator John Forsythe, a Democrat and former governor of Georgia, who said in response to comments by Senator Frelinghuysen author. The final document is Cherokee perspective and the reasons for their opposition to the removal of the memorial in the face of a letter written to the U.S. Congress in 1829. Statistical Portrait of the following documentary evidence. "Hide
by Tom Nicholas, Ari Medoff, Raven Smith Source: Harvard Business School 21 pages. Publication Date: December 6, 2011. Prod. #: 812079-PDF-ENG

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