1 / 10

Westward Migration and its Implications, 1815-1830

Westward Migration and its Implications, 1815-1830. Libertyville HS. New States. Three states entered union, 1791-1800 Two states entered union, 1801-1814 Six states entered union, 1815-1830 1790 US Population 3,893,635 (see 1790 census ) 1830 US population

kioshi
Télécharger la présentation

Westward Migration and its Implications, 1815-1830

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Westward Migration andits Implications, 1815-1830 Libertyville HS

  2. New States • Three states entered union, 1791-1800 • Two states entered union, 1801-1814 • Six states entered union, 1815-1830 • 1790 US Population • 3,893,635 (see 1790 census) • 1830 US population • 12,858,670 (see 1830 census pg 46)

  3. Frontier Cycle • Who came West? • Fur traders (trade ended by 1850) • Ranchers (esp. in TX, in 1840s) • Pioneer farmers (1830s) • Miners (after 1840s) Established routes used by settlers

  4. Indian-American Relations: Fallen Timbers • Federal government, NOT states, set policy • Precedent: Proclamation line of 1763 • Battle of Fallen Timbers (OH), 1794 • Struggle for control of NW Territory • Battle: • Prep. of Gen. Wayne (Legion) • British closed gates on NA • Led to Treaty of Greenville (1795) – NA gave up OH

  5. Indian-American Relations: Tecumseh’s War • Battle of Tippecanoe Creek (IN, 1811) • Tecumseh (Shawnee) – resisted US expansion • The Prophet (T’s brother): reject American ways! • Governor (and general) William Harrison – grabbing land for US settlers from NA • Alarmed, T sought Indian Confederation in S (FL) • Harrison attacked “Prophetown” b/c of NA attacks (P-town at T-canoe) • Battle of the Thames (Canada, 1813 – part of War of 1812) • Tecumseh killed • Confederacy fell apart

  6. Indian-American Relations: Southern America • Battle of Horseshoe Bend (AL, 1814) • Creek Indians (“Red Sticks”) vs. US, led by General Andrew Jackson • President Jackson had strong feelings against native Americans • Indian Removal Act of 1830 & Cherokee “The Trail of Tears”

  7. Indian-American Relations John Ross, elected Chief of Cherokee Nation • The Cherokee Struggle • Five nations were “civilized” (Americanized) tribes – didn’t matter • Cherokee Nation v. GA (1831) • GA passed laws essentially stripping Cherokees of their rights under state law, seized their land • USSC: no jurisdiction b/c Cherokee were not independent nations but “domestic dependent nations” • Worchester v. State of GA (1832) • Worchester an American missionary • USSC: States had no power over Indian tribes • Jackson: “Marshall has made his decision: now let him enforce it!” • State removal efforts continued • Cherokees removed from land to OK, 1838

  8. Indian-American Relations • Black Hawk War (IL, 1832) • Indians forced west, across Mississippi • Some, under Black Hawk, returned to traditional homes in IL • Militia, US army turned out, hunted them down with “climatic” fight at Bad Axe

  9. Indian-American Relations • Second Seminole War (FL, 1835-42) • Most expensive Indian war • Longest conflict, from Revolution to Vietnam • Issue: Removal • Most Seminoles fought removal from res to OK • Disappeared into FL swamps to fight guerrilla war • Eventually, remaining Seminoles settled in res in S. FL 1823 reservation 1842 Reservation

  10. Legacy of Indian-American Relations Displacement Removal Exclusion from American Democracy

More Related