Faragher, John Mack. Out of Many: A History of the American People. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson/Prentice Hall, 2006. Print.
The Indian Removal Act was President Andrew Jackson's measure that
allowed states to override federal protection of Native Americans, and
funded the appropriated amounts for relocation. This act caused plenty
of tensions between the regional parts of the United States of America
and between the president and the Native Americans. The President solely
represented the Southern and Western perspective as the North opposed
these actions with protests primarily from Protestant Missionaries.
Female protesters had raised money for missionaries who would assimilate
the Native Americans instead of relocating them elsewhere, it was the
first national female petition drive. But there was an unconstitutional
underlining with the Indian Removal Act, allowing Native Americans to
face there deaths such as the Trail of Tears that mainly consisted of
Cherokee deaths. It had displayed the unfair majority rule when such
minority sections were not strong enough to defend themselves and fight
for a compromise.
"Worcester v. The State of Georgia," Reports of Cases Argued and Adjudged in the Supreme Court of the United States. January Term 1832. Vol. VI. Richard Peters, ed. (Philadelphia: T. Desilver, Jr., 1832), 556-567 , 561.
As the state of Georgia began to forcibly remove Native Cherokees from their lands, the tribe went to the Supreme Court for a case and some assistance within this issue they faced. Despite the ruling from the Supreme Court, President Andrew Jackson continued to allow the state of Georgia to remove the Native Americans. It brought up the idea of Judicial Rule, where the Supreme Court had the right to claim if a law was unconstitutional where the other two branches had to listen to that ruling among the case they were discussing at the time of crisis. Because of past relations with Native tribes with acts of regulating trade and intercourse, it seemed that the United States had treated those Native Americans as sovereign nations meaning that they were never apart of this country or any state within the country.
These two sources extend each other, the Out Of Many explained the gist of what happened during the Indian Removal but the Worcester v. Georgia case was a specific problem within the time of Indian Removal. Out Of Many outlines all of the problems and provides clear, simple information such as the regional resistance in the North and the female protesters among with the violations the Federal government committed against the Native Americans in order to move them onto other lands. But the Supreme Court outlined the explanation of why the Natives should've been allowed to stay in those lands; the American people have been treating them as people from another nation not as another citizen from other states with acts speaking on regulation of trade and intercourse. It also provides some evidence that President Andrew Jackson's Indian Removal Act was unconstitutional, the government is ordered to protect the property, prosperity, and liberty of its people along with those who reside in our territories. The law went against those liberties and properties by forcing the Indians out of their own settlements and homes, also it allowed the state of Georgia to commit nullification which could potentially disable the national unity Jacksonians wanted to preserve.
Both of these sources help us with our study because obviously parts of the reading will be put on the unit test along with specific events like the Trail of Tears and the Black Hawk War. The Supreme Court case helps us with evidence against the Jacksonians with the potential disbandment of the union based on the state right to override Federal protection which could be considered nullification. But despite those reasons, it could be a bit too one-sided meaning that we should find more primary sources and secondary sources that hold more opinions and thoughts on this topic of Indian Removal.
Thursday, January 31, 2013
Monday, January 28, 2013
Annotated Bibliogrpahy: American Democracy
Takaki, Ronald T. A Different Mirror: A History of Multicultural America. New York: Back Bay /Little, Brown, and, 2008. Print.
In A Different Mirror: A History of Multicultural America, Ronald Takaki talks about the republican vision of America and how it helped shape the American Economy. Because the war for political independence secure economic freedom for America: it included the freedom to convert Indian lands into new American Territories, to trade wherever and with whomever they choose to, and just in general to expand the market like they've always wished to. Money had become the center of social relations, and as time continues to pass by the economy transforms with the new technology and the new people who have emigrated to America. Each region has it's own type of staple, that in all help shape the other types of commerce across the country to protect the economy based from those products. Because of the fact that America was becoming a country of vast cultures and peoples, many questions and concerns arose about preserving the racial homogeneity in multicultural America.
De Tocqueville, Alexis. Democracy in America. N.p.: n.p., 1835. Print.
Alexis de Tocqueville was a French noble who spent nine months in America who wrote the two volume study of democracy in America. The general equality of condition among the people was what shocked him the most, that equality creates opinions, gives birth to new ideas, finds customs, and modifies whatever it doesn't produce. America is the image of democracy itself, and in order to learn how to adapt to democracy we shall either use fear or to hope from its progress.
These two articles support and extend each other. Democracy in America is the main story behind democracy and the general explanation of how democracy had effected America. But A Different Mirror: A History of Multicultural America goes in depth on the affect of democracy and republicanism ideals. Republicanism has allowed America to improve its economy as Democracy helped stage America on the international stance as the image of democracy. With its new political freedom, the economy was able to expand and change throughout the years America has existed. But the government stood as a firm image of using the art of the purse of common desires and applying the new science of democracy to the greatest number of purposes. Although both of these articles share a similar opinion, they could always contradict each other based on its opposing sides of democracy and republicanism. Also these articles were potentially confusing if the student did not take a close-read in order to fully understand and take in what message the author was trying to convey about the American government and it's economy.
In A Different Mirror: A History of Multicultural America, Ronald Takaki talks about the republican vision of America and how it helped shape the American Economy. Because the war for political independence secure economic freedom for America: it included the freedom to convert Indian lands into new American Territories, to trade wherever and with whomever they choose to, and just in general to expand the market like they've always wished to. Money had become the center of social relations, and as time continues to pass by the economy transforms with the new technology and the new people who have emigrated to America. Each region has it's own type of staple, that in all help shape the other types of commerce across the country to protect the economy based from those products. Because of the fact that America was becoming a country of vast cultures and peoples, many questions and concerns arose about preserving the racial homogeneity in multicultural America.
De Tocqueville, Alexis. Democracy in America. N.p.: n.p., 1835. Print.
Alexis de Tocqueville was a French noble who spent nine months in America who wrote the two volume study of democracy in America. The general equality of condition among the people was what shocked him the most, that equality creates opinions, gives birth to new ideas, finds customs, and modifies whatever it doesn't produce. America is the image of democracy itself, and in order to learn how to adapt to democracy we shall either use fear or to hope from its progress.
These two articles support and extend each other. Democracy in America is the main story behind democracy and the general explanation of how democracy had effected America. But A Different Mirror: A History of Multicultural America goes in depth on the affect of democracy and republicanism ideals. Republicanism has allowed America to improve its economy as Democracy helped stage America on the international stance as the image of democracy. With its new political freedom, the economy was able to expand and change throughout the years America has existed. But the government stood as a firm image of using the art of the purse of common desires and applying the new science of democracy to the greatest number of purposes. Although both of these articles share a similar opinion, they could always contradict each other based on its opposing sides of democracy and republicanism. Also these articles were potentially confusing if the student did not take a close-read in order to fully understand and take in what message the author was trying to convey about the American government and it's economy.
Sunday, January 27, 2013
Theme Teams: The New Republic - Culture
George Washington |
Star-Spangled Banner |
Saturday, January 12, 2013
Annotated Bibliography: Remember the Ladies
Butterfield, L.H., editor. Adams Family Correspondence, vol. 1: pp. 369-371. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Belknap Press of Harvard University Pres, 1963-1993.
In March 1776 Abigail Adams wrote a letter to her husband, John Adams, who was serving as the Massachusetts representative to the Continental Congress placed in Philadelphia. Throughout the letter she wrote about freedom and to remember the ladies. Abigail Adams was a very insightful and bold woman, with this she went on to write that men are natural tyrants who only see women as a vassal to their sex. She wants the men in the congress to acknowledge that women also have opinions, and that the women were ready to create a rebellion if they would be bound by any laws which would either give them no voice nor representation.
Murray, Judith Sargent. "On the Equality of the Sexes." Letter. 1790. MS. Massachusetts Magazine, Gloucester, Massachusetts.
In 1790 Judith Sargent Murray's essay about gender equality was published in Massachusetts Magazine. Throughout the essay, she spoke about the way men were treated as superior to women. As if their minds and experiences were more of worth than a woman's mind and experiences. Murray then goes on to say that in nature, God had created equal minds; both of worth and intelligence. Because of the superiority men seem to claim, women do not reach their full potential; they go on to dwell in sexual desires, unhappiness, and bitterness. Based on the fact that women are the other gender, we invest in a female mind with superior strength as an equivalent to the bodily powers of the men.
These two sources support and extend each other. In Abigail Adam's letter she wants the men to see the women as more than a addition to complete their sex, and in Murray's essay she explains why women should be acknowledged. Adams said that women were only treated as "the vassals of your Sex" but Murray writes that the female sex has "souls are by nature equal to yours" meaning that women are created in the same worth as men are. Men should not denounce a woman based on the simple fact that men believe women are put on earth to serve as their other half who have zero worth because they were not given the same chance at superiority as a young man would receive. Both of these letters are useful in our study of the Early Republic because we will see the beginnings of the gender equality movement set forward by the women. This issue will arise throughout the history of our country during the time period, it creates another historical struggle for the developing country. It gives us another example of what problems the president at that time would have to deal with during his term(s). But they are both limited, Adams did not include what plenty of the other women thought nor did Murray explain in depth what the men thought about the female gender. Despite the intellectual worth each of these sources display, there are still other opinions out there besides the popular belief both of these woman seem to agree with on this issue of equality.
In March 1776 Abigail Adams wrote a letter to her husband, John Adams, who was serving as the Massachusetts representative to the Continental Congress placed in Philadelphia. Throughout the letter she wrote about freedom and to remember the ladies. Abigail Adams was a very insightful and bold woman, with this she went on to write that men are natural tyrants who only see women as a vassal to their sex. She wants the men in the congress to acknowledge that women also have opinions, and that the women were ready to create a rebellion if they would be bound by any laws which would either give them no voice nor representation.
Murray, Judith Sargent. "On the Equality of the Sexes." Letter. 1790. MS. Massachusetts Magazine, Gloucester, Massachusetts.
In 1790 Judith Sargent Murray's essay about gender equality was published in Massachusetts Magazine. Throughout the essay, she spoke about the way men were treated as superior to women. As if their minds and experiences were more of worth than a woman's mind and experiences. Murray then goes on to say that in nature, God had created equal minds; both of worth and intelligence. Because of the superiority men seem to claim, women do not reach their full potential; they go on to dwell in sexual desires, unhappiness, and bitterness. Based on the fact that women are the other gender, we invest in a female mind with superior strength as an equivalent to the bodily powers of the men.
These two sources support and extend each other. In Abigail Adam's letter she wants the men to see the women as more than a addition to complete their sex, and in Murray's essay she explains why women should be acknowledged. Adams said that women were only treated as "the vassals of your Sex" but Murray writes that the female sex has "souls are by nature equal to yours" meaning that women are created in the same worth as men are. Men should not denounce a woman based on the simple fact that men believe women are put on earth to serve as their other half who have zero worth because they were not given the same chance at superiority as a young man would receive. Both of these letters are useful in our study of the Early Republic because we will see the beginnings of the gender equality movement set forward by the women. This issue will arise throughout the history of our country during the time period, it creates another historical struggle for the developing country. It gives us another example of what problems the president at that time would have to deal with during his term(s). But they are both limited, Adams did not include what plenty of the other women thought nor did Murray explain in depth what the men thought about the female gender. Despite the intellectual worth each of these sources display, there are still other opinions out there besides the popular belief both of these woman seem to agree with on this issue of equality.
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