The legal ideology of removal : the southern judiciary and the sovereignty of Native American nations

Author(s)

    • Garrison, Tim Alan

Bibliographic Information

The legal ideology of removal : the southern judiciary and the sovereignty of Native American nations

Tim Alan Garrison

(Studies in the legal history of the South)

University of Georgia Press, 2009, c2002

  • : pbk

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Note

Bibliography: p. [291]-312

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This study shows how state courts enabled the mass expulsion of Native Americans from their southern homelands in the 1830s. Because the federal government upheld Native American self-dominion, southerners bent on expropriating Indian land sought a legal toehold through state supreme court decisions. As Tim Alan Garrison discusses Georgia v. Tassels (1830), Caldwell v. Alabama (1831), Tennessee v. Forman (1835), and other cases, he shows how proremoval partisans exploited regional sympathies. By casting removal as a states' rights issue, rather than a moral one, they won the wide support of a land-hungry southern populace.

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