"Sovereignty on Trial tells the story of a trio of landmark United States Supreme Court cases-Johnson v. MIntosh (1823), Cherokee Nation v. Georgia (1831), and Worcester v. Georgia (1832)-that considered the legal status of Native nations in the early nineteenth century. The cases, all decided by Chief Justice John Marshall and known as the Marshall Trilogy, ultimately put the federal government in a position of authority, making Native people dependent on the United States, like that of a "ward to its guardian." The latter two cases were decided against the backdrop of the Indian Removal Act of 1830 that President Andrew Jackson signed into law. When the Cherokee failed in their effort to challenge this law, they were forcibly removed in the now infamous tragedy known as the Trail of Tears. Their territory was then divided up into 40- and 160-acre lots and distributed via lottery to Georgian citizens, who swarmed the Cherokee land, forcing families from their homes and stealing their property.
Tim Alan Garrison places this trio of cases in their broader historical context, examining other relevant cases, including Fletcher v. Peck, New Jersey v. Wilson, and Georgia v. Tassel. Garrison explains why Georgia sought to expel the Cherokees from their homeland and how the changes in Cherokee political culture determined their strategy in resisting the states onslaught. He also describes the human and financial costs of the removal policy, recounting how these attacks on Cherokee sovereignty tore apart their national unity, as some Cherokees agreed to sign the Treaty of New Echota in December 1835 that ceded all their land east of the Mississippi River to the United States"-- Provided by publisher."The story of the legal battle between the Cherokee Nation and the State of Georgia that ultimately led to the infamous Trail of Tears and the ongoing struggles for Native sovereignty.Sovereignty on Trial tells the story of a trio of landmark United States Supreme Court cases-Johnson v.
MIntosh (1823), Cherokee Nation v. Georgia (1831), and Worcester v. Georgia (1832)-that considered the legal status of Native nations in the early nineteenth century.Known as the Marshall Trilogy-majority opinions all written by Chief Justice John Marshall-the decisions are inconsistent in their holdings and reasoning, leaving American Indian law and interpretations of Native sovereignty confusing and ambiguous. In MIntosh, Marshall used the imperial doctrine of discovery to diminish the property rights and autonomy of the Native nations. Subsequent interpretations of Marshalls opinion in Cherokee Nation, with its "guardian and ward" analogy, ultimately placed Native people in a dependent status with the United States. At the end of his judicial career, however, Marshall came to view Native rights in a different light, and his opinion in Worcester was a powerful acclamation of Native political sovereignty and territorial rights. Courts have tried with little success to find a coherent line through the three rulings.
The two Georgia cases resulted from the states efforts to extend its jurisdiction over the Cherokee Nation and annihilate its government. These cases were decided against the backdrop of the Indian Removal Act of 1830. When President Andrew Jackson and Congress failed to enforce Worcester, Georgia interned and forcibly removed the Cherokee in the now infamous tragedy known as the Trail of Tears.Tim Alan Garrison places this trio of cases in their broader legal and historical context. Significantly, Garrison explains why Georgia sought to expel the Cherokees from their homeland, how these attacks on native sovereignty tore apart Cherokee national unity, and how the changes in Cherokee political culture determined their strategy in resisting the states onslaught. The Cherokee resistance against Georgia was a remarkable example of national courage for the Indigenous peoples of the world, and their determination to fight oppression through the judicial system of the United States left a lasting impact on American Indian law. The Cherokee Cases tells an important, if disturbing, story whose reverberations are felt to the present day"-- Provided by publisher.