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Published on Sep 19, 2016
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1.
Indian Removal and Westward Expansion
Parts I and II
Photo by
mypubliclands
2.
Reasons for Expansion
Expansion of the Cotton Industry/Cotton South
Expansion of American economic and political interests
Expansion was seen as a divine right, and rapid western settlement a moral imperative
New opportunities to acquire land/resources in the new Republic
3.
Reasons for Expansion
Territories controlled or inhabited by Native Americans were seen as misused, abused and underutilized
Expansion of American economic and political interests
4.
What is the meaning of Progress?
Photo by
Missouri History Museum
5.
Keywords
Disposess - To deprive (someone) of something that they own, typically land or property.
Savage - a member of a people who are regarded as primitive and uncivilized.
Photo by
sickmouthy
6.
Sarah Winnemucca
Author, Educator, Interpreter and Military Scout
7.
Highlights
Birth name Thocmetony, born in Nebraska territory circa 1844
Attended a school in San Jose until she was forced out.
Sarah served as an interpreter for the U.S. government’s Indian agents
Photo by
ToOliver2
8.
Highlights
Toured the country speaking out against the dispossession and condition of her people under the U.S. appointed agents and reservation systems.
Wrote Life Among the Piutes and used proceeds to open a school on the reservation.
Photo by
kevin dooley
9.
Frontier Society
10.
"Savages are to be curbed by fear only"
-Thomas Jefferson 1780
11.
Keywords
Pacification - The act of forcibly suppressing or eliminating a population considered to be hostile.
Photo by
sickmouthy
12.
Jackson's Rationale for Removal - 1829
Civilizing Mission
Ironically to avoid extinction and provide more freedom outside of individual state jurisdictions
Steeped in stereotypes
13.
"I ask you, shall red men live or shall they be swept from the earth?"
-Elias Boudinot
Photo by
cobalt123
14.
Things to Consider
Did the removal of the Native Americans from east of the Mississippi River violate the principles found in the Declaration of Independence?
15.
Things to Consider
Read John Ross’s thoughts on removal and compare his sentiments to Sarah Winnemucca's last words on American Indian Policy.
How do they frame the position of Native Americans after the removal policy has been implemented?
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