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Articles related to "Trade And Intercourse Act"


Working hand in hand with assimilation, removal became a key component of America's policy towards Indian tribes.
The first Trade and Intercourse Act, passed in 1790, outlined the rules governing economic relationships between the United States and Indian tribes.
Under the leadership of President George Washington, the United States reaffirmed its policy of fair trade with Indian tribes in 1793.
Between 1796 and 1802, the United States government refined its trade policy.
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 the federal government set up a series of rules governing trade with Indian nations, they did not provide for the mechanisms of that trade.
In the late spring of 1830, two opposing viewpoints clashed over the future of America's policy towards Indian tribes.
With the end of the factory system, the Office of Indian Affairs took over the direction of American policy towards Indian tribes.


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