Since the inauguration of President Thomas Jefferson to return home to India, the American government has been working on Indians to adapt to the American white lifestyle. Many Indian groups refused to adapt to these methods and moved them from eastern land to the west (over 280 people). Several Indian tribes have refused to allow the federal government to sign the treaty to remove Indians from their land. And it provided space for white immigrants (Out of Many 280).
India Exile Bill In 1830, the Jackson administration enacted "India Exile Bill". This act removes indigenous people from the land of their ancestors and makes places for additional US immigrants. This act caused them to leave their home in many Indian tribes, including five large tribes, Cherokee, Chicasso, Choctos, Click, Seminole. The population of these tribes is estimated to be approximately 65,000 people living in North Carolina, Georgia, Florida, and Alabama. In the ever-increasing implementation phase, removal of mining from the top of the mountain caused many obstacles, including severe damage to neighboring residents and pollution of the environment that was once pure. Therefore, in order to protect the natural state of the Appalachian Mountains, it is necessary to limit the removal of mining from the top of the mountain. The mountaintop was destroyed
Andrew Jackson strongly urged India's expulsion bill. He led Indian exile campaign to defeat Indian Indians in his 1814 military career and to help negotiate 11 important conventions to take away the American Indians from their land. From a legal point of view, the US Constitution approves Congress "to regulate trade with foreign countries, between several countries and with Indian tribes". When Andrew Jackson became president, he took a systematic approach to abolish the Native American Indian based on this legal precedent and immediately instructed Congress to pass the Indian expulsion law in 1830 .