Indian History 1800-1828 As
we have seen, the American Indian was a tragic casualty of imperial
expansion, First by the European nations and, after 1776, increasingly
by the United States. The rise of the American nation on the Atlantic
seaboard and its rapid expansion into the trans-Appalachian interior
produced drastic change in attitude toward the indian. American pioneers
entered the
wilderness
as families. Their society was agrarian-based; the father, mother, and
many children of each family provided the labor required to open a frontier
farm. Thus, American pioneers did not need the indians. However, because
of their rapidly expanding population and changes in agricultural technology
and markets, they needed the Indians’ land.
In the evolution of public
processes and techniclues, or policy, for Native Americans two men exercised
the greatest influence: Thomas Jefferson and Andrew Jackson. Jeffersonian
influences were strongest in the period 1800-1828. The Jeffersonian
Philosophy President Jefferson did not subscribe to the popular view
that Indians were inferior; Be believed that "in body and mind" they
were "equal" to whites. The essence of Jeffersonian Indian policy was
coexistence and gradunlism, that is, the steady if slow accommodation
of Indians to Angle-American lifestyle through the transforming process
of civilization, culminating in their actually intermarrying into the
dominant Anglo-American society. Jefferson believed that "civilization
would bring peace" between Indians and settlers. Thus under his leadership
the national government placed its "greatest hope in its policy of bringing
civilization to the Indians." Jefferson constantly urged tribal leaders
to change their life-style in order to require less land for their people.
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