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While the federal government set up a series of rules governing trade with Indian nations, they did not provide for the mechanisms of that trade.
Working hand in hand with assimilation, removal became a key component of America's policy towards Indian tribes.
In the late spring of 1830, two opposing viewpoints clashed over the future of America's policy towards Indian tribes.
Under the Office of Indian Affairs, the old policy of assimilation was renewed.
Though of the same nation, Keokuk and Black Hawk were on opposite sides of the debate on the topic of land cessions.
In the summer of 1832, Black Hawk struck out at settlers and military posts along the border of Illinois while the United States worked to counter his presence.
Black Hawk began to speak out against Keokuk and his close relationship with the United States.
Before the Seven Years' War, the individual colonies were responsible for diplomatic and trade relations with indigenous tribes.
Between 1831 and 1833, the Choctaw Nation was moved into Oklahoma under the supervision of armed American soldiers.
Rather than allow the individual states to develop their own policies, the Committee on Indian Affairs established a national system of collective bargaining and treaty m
The Treaty of Ft. Jackson took 26 million acres of land away from the Creek Nation, but a determined band of Creek moved to Florida and continued to resist.
To this day, the mystery surrounding the sudden abandonment of the cliff dwellings of the Anasazi remains unanswered.
In 1830, Andrew Jackson rammed a law through Congress that would open the door for the removal of Indian nations to the western expanse.
The Northwest Ordinance was an effort to curtail white settlement on Indian lands and establish a set of rules for future expansion.
Tracing the birth of NYC's Broadway, including the "Tin Pan Alley," Ziegfeld, Shubert brothers, and it first performers like Cantor, Jolson and M. Miller.
With the end of the factory system, the Office of Indian Affairs took over the direction of American policy towards Indian tribes.
The Factory System was created through the Trade and Intercourse Acts, but the Office of Indian Trade created a national directorate for these posts.
While Black Hawk fought, Keokuk negotiated--the result was a rift between the Sauk and Fox.
Pursued by the Americans under the tenacious Andrew Jackson, Red Eagle fought both the whites and his own people in defense of his homeland
The Sauk and Fox forged a union to provide mutual security. Together they resisted the American advance.
Under the leadership of President George Washington, the United States reaffirmed its policy of fair trade with Indian tribes in 1793.
From the Colonial Period, white settlers have made efforts to cultivate Indian tribes--a policy known as assimilation.
The idea of a separate Indian Territory came as a direct result of the French and Indian War.
In September of 1830, the Choctaw Nation ceded 11 million acres of land to the American government in a controversial treaty.
The North American horse became extinct long before the arrival of European colonists.
Between 1796 and 1802, the United States government refined its trade policy.
The first Trade and Intercourse Act, passed in 1790, outlined the rules governing economic relationships between the United States and Indian tribes.
After the relocation of the Choctaw Nation, the United States steeped up its efforts to remove native tribes and resettle them in Indian Territory.
The Anasazi established a trading empire that was among the most advanced in pre-contact North America.
While engaging Indian resistance in the southeast, the United States encountered a unique ally and a powerful enemy in the Creek Nation.
In the summer of 1832, Black Hawk once again returned to Illinois to build alliances with neutral tribes.
No one really knowns what caused the Anasazi nation to relocate to southwestern Colorado and take up residence amid the cliffs and canyons.
Striking with a small band of warriors, the Sauk war chief raged against the American presence in his homeland.


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