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Drew paints critical picture of Andrew Jackson, architect of Indian removalHistorians and biographers have written more than 200 books about the seventh president of the United States, Andrew Jackson. Most have painted him as a steadfast national hero, a victorious general and an administrator of the expansion and enrichment of the nation. Bettina Drew, assistant professor of English, is writing a biography of Jackson arguing that he is responsible for the largest ethnic cleansing in U.S. history.
Drew details how Jackson accomplished this feat by exacting land cessions in military victory, threatening war, and later, passing legislation. Drew said Jackson never wavered—he first wrote of it when he was 26—from his conviction that treaties with the Indians were absurd and that their nations had to go. He saw the Indians in broadly racial terms, not as degraded as blacks but essentially inferior to white Europeans, and he saw no role for their race in the hierarchical social world of the slave-holding South.
Yale University Press will publish Drew’s biography. Additional links: |
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