Another Look at Cherokee Removal A.J. Langguth’s latest offering, Driven West: Andrew Jackson and the Trail of Tears to the Civil War, is an imaginative retelling of a familiar tale. Told as a series of miniature biographies that drive the narrative, Langguth begins with Henry C...
Past chief of the Cherokee Nation (1985- 1995) and social activist Wilma Mankiller remarked, We are...
This study will focus on the development of Andrew Jackson\u27s attitude toward the American Indian ...
Although the Cherokees were among a great number of Indian nations from all over the eastern half of...
Making the South in Jackson’s Image Early on in Steve Inskeep’s book, Jacksonland, he makes the auda...
For well over a century, historians have pondered Andrew Jackson’s motivation behind the Indian Remo...
Andrew Jackson: A Man of the Southern Frontier Mark Cheathem’s new biography of the seventh presiden...
David W. Levy Prize winnerOn May 28, 1830 President Andrew Jackson signed the Indian Removal Act, au...
This paper explores the Cherokee Nation’s experience in the American Civil War. It delves into the i...
The Treaty of New Echota was signed by a small group of Cherokee Indians and provided for the remova...
The intent of this paper is to discuss Andrew Jackson?s controversial actions and policies affecting...
Article explores the political context of removal of the Cherokee tribe from their native lands by e...
John Andrew Jackson was a former slave who lived in the early-to-middle nineteenth century. After es...
Dan Wimberly’s Cherokee in Controversy examines the life of Jesse Bushyhead, a Cherokee minister, in...
Because military action in Indian Territory had negligible impact on the Civil War, most accounts of...
‘Established Legitimacy’ is a term used to describe the normalization of violence within a society. ...
Past chief of the Cherokee Nation (1985- 1995) and social activist Wilma Mankiller remarked, We are...
This study will focus on the development of Andrew Jackson\u27s attitude toward the American Indian ...
Although the Cherokees were among a great number of Indian nations from all over the eastern half of...
Making the South in Jackson’s Image Early on in Steve Inskeep’s book, Jacksonland, he makes the auda...
For well over a century, historians have pondered Andrew Jackson’s motivation behind the Indian Remo...
Andrew Jackson: A Man of the Southern Frontier Mark Cheathem’s new biography of the seventh presiden...
David W. Levy Prize winnerOn May 28, 1830 President Andrew Jackson signed the Indian Removal Act, au...
This paper explores the Cherokee Nation’s experience in the American Civil War. It delves into the i...
The Treaty of New Echota was signed by a small group of Cherokee Indians and provided for the remova...
The intent of this paper is to discuss Andrew Jackson?s controversial actions and policies affecting...
Article explores the political context of removal of the Cherokee tribe from their native lands by e...
John Andrew Jackson was a former slave who lived in the early-to-middle nineteenth century. After es...
Dan Wimberly’s Cherokee in Controversy examines the life of Jesse Bushyhead, a Cherokee minister, in...
Because military action in Indian Territory had negligible impact on the Civil War, most accounts of...
‘Established Legitimacy’ is a term used to describe the normalization of violence within a society. ...
Past chief of the Cherokee Nation (1985- 1995) and social activist Wilma Mankiller remarked, We are...
This study will focus on the development of Andrew Jackson\u27s attitude toward the American Indian ...
Although the Cherokees were among a great number of Indian nations from all over the eastern half of...