AMERICA 250
My series on the highlights and lowlights of American history, marking this nation’s 250th birthday. The whole idea being we, as a nation, have done great things and we’ve done rotten things. And sometimes the things we’ve done have been both great and rotten. We are, to be sure, all too human.
And now, a lowlight. A stinking, shitty, disgusting lowlight in our nation’s history. It’s only nominally less abhorrent than anything the Nazis ever did in Europe. The difference is the Nazis were far more efficient in their approach to genocide.
May 28, 1830: The date President Andrew Jackson signed the Indian Removal Act. The legislation effectively allowed the federal government to displace any and all Indigenous Peoples from their lands east of the Mississippi River.
Jackson had been a loud advocate for sweeping Indigenous Peoples off their lands in the United States.
The Act covered fertile lands, primarily in the southeast, including South Carolina, Georgia, and part of Florida. Jackson and the feds had their eyes on millions of acres of potential farmland that could be occupied by Whites. The legislation opened up vast spreads of land for cotton growing, now exploding in the US thanks to the development of Eli Whitney’s cotton gin. In addition to ethnically “cleansing” the region, the Act spurred a huge increase in slavery, even as other federal legislation was enacted to gradually chip away at the practice.
The Act called for negotiations in good faith between the feds and Indigenous Peoples, with the promise of fair exchanges — you agree to move and we’ll let you resettle west of the Mississippi. At the time, the area west of the Mississippi was thought of, largely, as irrelevant to the future of the US.
Good faith negotiations and fair exchanges, though, were the last things Jackson and his gang intended. Seizing land was their first — and only — priority. Creeks, Cherokees, Chickasaws, Seminoles, and Choctaws had been getting whipped in skirmishes and wars for decades as White “settlers” poured into what had been traditional tribal lands and the US Army forcefully moved the tribes out. Those Indigenous Peoples, known as the Five Civilized Tribes, decided to sit down and bargain with the United States.. Perhaps, they figured, we can get a good deal.
They couldn’t.
Dealmaking was not a top priority for the US. Removal was. And if it couldn’t be accomplished at the bargaining table, it’d be done at the point of a gun. Oh, sure, there some were nice little tracts of land west of the Mississippi where the Natives could relocate, but over the next half century, as the expanding United States began to realize those tracts, too, were mighty attractive, the deals and treaties it made with tribes were broken. Tragically.
Worse, 60,000 Cherokees, among some others, who hadn’t been any too pleased with “negotiations” for their lands, were forced to march from their ancestral homelands in the Smoky Mountains to what was then called “Indian Territory” (present day Oklahoma). As abominable as the Bataan Death March or the Nazi “cattle cars” of the future, the forced relocations that became known as the Trail of Tears resulted in mass suffering and death.

Painting, “Forced Move,” by Max Standley.
By 1840, virtually no Indigenous Peoples lived any longer in the southeastern United States
Hitler would have approved.
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