U.S. Policy Toward the Cherokee Nation of Georgia 1827–1828

Authors

  • Suha Abd ul-Ameer Jasim Alasady General of the Holy Karbala Education The

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.66026/ea12ja11

Keywords:

Cherokee Tribe, United States, Native Americans, Immigration, Georgia.

Abstract

The Cherokee tribe in Georgia, one of the indigenous tribes in the United States of America, suffered from great pressures exerted against them by the administration of President John Quincy Adams the sixth president of the United States for(1825-1828) and the Georgia State Legislature,  that the incorporation of indigenous Americans as entire and equal citizens was more difficult than the new arrivals realized ,so it was decided that most Indians would eventually be treated in the saves ,in order to remove them from the state and head to the western United States, in order to impose the complete sovereignty of the state of Georgia over all its lands without the participation of any other category of the population and the American administration group of the population, and the Between all years 1827 and 1828, the American administration implemented its plan aimed at achieving this goal through various means, the most prominent of which is following the path of negotiations and the policy of entitlement in order to persuade the Cherokee tribe in the state of Georgia to leave their lands, which were characterized by the intense city sites and a wide-ranging construction of the installed hills and other works, , most notably following the path of negotiations and the policy of enticement in order to convince the Cherokee tribe in Georgia to leave their lands.

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Published

2026-01-15