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Following passage of the #IndianRemovalAct, the #Choctaw made the #TreatyOfDancingRabbitCreek #ThisDayInHistory in 1831, trading 11 million acres in #Mississippi for 15 million in #IndianTerritory... all of which they lost due to #Oklahoma statehood and the Dawes & Curtis Acts.

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🚨Freedom Cities and State Nations are the Inverse of Reservation of the Indian Removal Act🚨 #indianremovalact #15minutecity #thematrixnetwork

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🚨Same Show just New Actors - 15 Minute Cities in 1830 with the Indian Removal Act🚨 #indianremovalact #15minutecity #thematrixnetwork

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We’ve a checkered history in this country, with freedom most especially. It’s high time we’re talking about it, because this regime wants to turn the whole board grey.

#SmithAct
#AlienRegistration
#ExecutiveOrder9066
#ChineseExclusionAct
#IndianRemovalAct
#Slavery

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Pseudo- #Archäologie hat schon 1830 für den #IndianREMovalAct 👇hergehalten:
#Indigene hätten das Gebiet östlich des Mississippi eingenommen, in dem VOR IHNEN vom Osten migrierte Europäer gesiedelt hätten (behauptet durch die gefundenen komplexen Erdwerke,die nur weißen Ursprungs sein könnten)
32:OO

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Indian Removal Act of 1830 map

Indian Removal Act of 1830 map

The #IndianRemovalAct of 1830 allowed the US government to relocate tens of thousands of #NativeAmericans, killing thousands in those merciless, brutal military campaigns. It happened before. It can happen again.

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Clarinda has a story to share. Though she is mute, her eyes speak of love and survival through a turbulent time in American history. Learn more at www.historiumpress.com/heather-miller #americanindian #indianremovalact #cherokeenation #AmericanHistory #historicalfiction

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Clarinda has a story to share. Though she is mute, her eyes speak of love and survival through a turbulent time in American history. Learn more at www.historiumpress.com/heather-miller #americanindian #indianremovalact #cherokeenation #AmericanHistory #historicalfiction

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This Day in History — May 28, 1830, Andrew Jackson Signs Indian Removal Act This Day in History. On this day in 1830, 195 years ago, President Andrew Jackson signed the Indian Removal Act.

IN CASE YOU MISSED IT:
📅 This Day in History: May 28, 1830
President Andrew Jackson signed the Indian Removal Act, forcing approximately 50,000 Native people from their homelands, a brutal chapter of U.S. history.
#IndianRemovalAct #TrailOfTears #History #ThisDayInHistory #IndigenousVoices

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#AndrewJackson signed the #IndianRemovalAct into law, initiating the ethnic cleansing of #NativeAmericans; #DonaldTrump is now using $38 billion a year + $33 billion in new funding to bankroll #ApartheidIsrael's ethnic cleansing of illegally occupied #Palestine 🍉

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_...

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6/6 We should never allow this day to pass w/o remembering. This was not progress. This was not destiny. This was colonization and cruelty, sanctioned by law.

We remember.
We resist.
We reclaim.

#IndianRemovalAct #NeverForget #IndigenousResistance #TrailOfTears #HonorOurAncestors #LandBack

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During the fall and winter of 1838 & 1839, the Cherokees were forcibly moved west by the United States government. Approximately 4,000 Cherokees died on this forced march, which became known as the " #TrailOfTears. " SOURCE: Library of Congress
#IndianRemovalAct
#AmericanHistory
#WhiteSupremacy

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#OTD in History 1830

May 28: The #IndianRemovalAct was Signed into Law
Context: The Act authorized the president to grant lands west of the Mississippi in exchange for Indian lands within existing state borders.
Facts: A few tribes went peacefully, but many resisted relocation.
#TrailOfTears

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On #ThisDayInHistory in 1830, president #AndrewJackson signed the #IndianRemovalAct into law, calling for genocidal #EthnicCleansing of the South. It was shut down by the #SupremeCourt, but his administration ignored the ruling, setting important precedent for dictatorial acts.

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May 28 Peace Love Art Activism | The Woodstock Whisperer/Jim Shelley May 28 Peace Love Art Activism, 2019: SCOTUSt left in place a lower court ruling in favor of a Pennsylvania school district policy that allowed some transgender

#Peace #Love #Art #Activism #May28 #AndrewJackson #IndianRemovalAct 1830 #SamBowers #VernonDahmer arrested 1998 #NASA launches monkeys 1959 #AmnestyInternational 1961 #Pakistan nuclear test 1998 #ICAN 2010 #musicetal #Armenia #Azerbaijan 1918 #Miami 1993 woodstockwhisperer.info/2017/05/28/m...

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On this day in 1830, President Andrew Jackson signed the Indian Removal Act into law, leading to the forced relocation of Native American tribes. #OTD #IndianRemovalAct #USHistory

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And what it means for a people to fight for their souls. Are you fighting yet? Don’t wait until it’s too late. #NoCapitol #Sinners #Politics #Irish #Chinese #Indigenous #Mississippi #Delta #fannielouhamer #MLK #BLM #Resist #BlackIrish #IndianRemovalAct #BecomingWhite #SummerForDemocracy #DEI #ICE

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Neuverteilung von Land, ohne die Einwohner:innen zu fragen - Kernkompetenz weißer Amerikaner seit zweihundert Jahren. #Ukraine #Gaza #IndianRemovalAct

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The Trail of Tears refers to the forced relocation of approximately 100,000 Indigenous people, primarily from the Cherokee, Creek, Chickasaw, Choctaw, and Seminole nations, during the 1830s. This mass displacement was a consequence of the Indian Removal Act of 1830, signed by President Andrew Jackson, which aimed to clear Native American lands in the Southeastern United States for white settlers. The relocated tribes were moved to designated Indian Territory, now present-day Oklahoma, through a series of arduous journeys marked by immense suffering and loss of life[2][4][5].

### Key Events and Conditions:
- **Indian Removal Act (1830):** This legislation authorized the U.S. government to negotiate treaties with Native tribes to exchange their ancestral lands for territory west of the Mississippi River[2][6].
- **Cherokee Resistance:** The Cherokee fought removal through legal and political means but were ultimately forced out after the Treaty of New Echota (1835), which ceded their lands under controversial circumstances[2][6].
- **Journey Details:** The relocation involved multiple overland and water routes stretching over 1,000 miles. Most traveled on foot under harsh conditions, with limited supplies, leading to widespread disease, starvation, and exposure[3][5].
- **Casualties:** It is estimated that around 15,000 Indigenous people died during or shortly after the journey due to disease, malnutrition, and harsh weather conditions. The Cherokee alone lost about one-fourth of their population[3][5].

### Broader Impact:
The Trail of Tears is remembered as a tragic chapter in U.S. history and is often cited as an example of ethnic cleansing or genocide due to the deliberate policies that led to immense suffering and death among Indigenous populations. Today, it is commemorated through historical sites and trails that mark the routes taken by displaced tribes[4][5][8].

The Trail of Tears refers to the forced relocation of approximately 100,000 Indigenous people, primarily from the Cherokee, Creek, Chickasaw, Choctaw, and Seminole nations, during the 1830s. This mass displacement was a consequence of the Indian Removal Act of 1830, signed by President Andrew Jackson, which aimed to clear Native American lands in the Southeastern United States for white settlers. The relocated tribes were moved to designated Indian Territory, now present-day Oklahoma, through a series of arduous journeys marked by immense suffering and loss of life[2][4][5]. ### Key Events and Conditions: - **Indian Removal Act (1830):** This legislation authorized the U.S. government to negotiate treaties with Native tribes to exchange their ancestral lands for territory west of the Mississippi River[2][6]. - **Cherokee Resistance:** The Cherokee fought removal through legal and political means but were ultimately forced out after the Treaty of New Echota (1835), which ceded their lands under controversial circumstances[2][6]. - **Journey Details:** The relocation involved multiple overland and water routes stretching over 1,000 miles. Most traveled on foot under harsh conditions, with limited supplies, leading to widespread disease, starvation, and exposure[3][5]. - **Casualties:** It is estimated that around 15,000 Indigenous people died during or shortly after the journey due to disease, malnutrition, and harsh weather conditions. The Cherokee alone lost about one-fourth of their population[3][5]. ### Broader Impact: The Trail of Tears is remembered as a tragic chapter in U.S. history and is often cited as an example of ethnic cleansing or genocide due to the deliberate policies that led to immense suffering and death among Indigenous populations. Today, it is commemorated through historical sites and trails that mark the routes taken by displaced tribes[4][5][8].

#TrailOfTears
#NativeAmericanHistory
#IndianRemovalAct
#CherokeeNation
#IndigenousRights
#ForcedRelocation
#USHistory
#EthnicCleansing
#GenocideAwareness
#HistoricalTrauma
#NativeAmericanHeritage
#SeminoleNation
#ChoctawNation
#ChickasawNation
#CreekNation
#AndrewJackson

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In 1830 #PresAndrewJackson lauded the government’s removal of Indians beyond white settlements. The #IndianRemovalAct was passed: House 102/97; Senate 28/19. Trump greatly admires Jackson, which explains #ICEdetentionsofNavajoinAZ just days after the death of the last WWIIcodetalker

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Andrew Jackson

Andrew Jackson

Indian Removal Act

Indian Removal Act

#AndrewJackson signed the #IndianRemovalAct into law, initiating the ethnic cleansing of Native Americans from the Southeast; #GenocideJoeBiden is using $3.8 billion a year to subsidize the #EthnicCleansingOfPalestine; do we ever learn the lessons of history...?
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_...

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On #ThisDayInHistory in 1830, the #IndianRemovalAct was signed by #AndrewJackson (Trump's fave pres.). Its purpose was #genocide and #ethniccleansing -- to remove all the #indigenous peoples east of the Mississippi River. That it's not called genocide says a lot about the US.

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"In the monuments & fortresses of an unknown people (…) we behold the memorials of a once powerful race, which was exterminated or has disappeared to make room for the existing savage tribes."

President A. Jackson's Case for the #IndianRemovalAct (Message to Congress, Dec 1829)

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