To many white settlers, these Indians were an obstacle in the face of progress. In their eagerness to settle down and start their livelihood, they pressured the government to remove the Indian nations. President Jackson’s fear of an apprising against the autonomous Indian nations promoted him to move the Indians from their land to lands west of the Mississippi river. He figured it was the best way to keep them safe and protected. He planned to offer a fair price for their land and pay for all their moving expenses of the new settlement. This move would also benefit the economy because it’s opening new lands to white settlements. …show more content…
The bill enforced opposition, but the strongest one came from David Crocket who used to be a Jacksonian until the president decided to pass such laws. Regardless of that, however, the Indian Removal act did pass.
The relocation of the Indians was supposed to be peaceful, but some of them resisted. Even though the President could remove Native tribes, the Indians were supposed to be willing to move, but not all of them were. The Choctaw, Chickasaw, and Creek nations restricted sales to the United States government as a way to protect their land. But it was useless, and they had to be pressured to leave.
The Indians were having a hard time coping with the new environmental changes in the new lands. They were supposed to live autonomously beyond the jurisdiction of the new state, Georgia. But again, president Jackson declared that he wouldn’t tolerate independent nations inside the United States, and that lead the supreme court to interfere in problems between the