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Elias Boudinot and the Cherokee Nation: Assimilation, Resistance, and the Cost of Survival

Shen, Sihan
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Excerpt from paper: As the United States expanded westward in the early nineteenth century, settlers’ demand for land sparked conflicts with the Indigenous peoples occupying their ancestral lands. The Cherokee Nation, one of the tribes facing removal, adopted the strategy of assimilation to resist displacement. Elias Boudinot, a prominent Cherokee leader and newspaper editor of the Cherokee Phoenix, played a key role in this effort. Through his editorials, Boudinot aimed to document Cherokee advancement and demonstrate that the Cherokee could become as “civilized” as Americans. However, he soon realized that the U.S. government's push for removal had little to do with perceptions of Cherokee backwardness and everything to do with a refusal to accept their existence as Indians. Disillusioned, Boudinot gave up the resistance effort and supported removal, seeing it as the most pragmatic means to ensure his people's survival. Boudinot's shift in stance on removal represented not a betrayal from his tribe but a strategic decision that prioritized the survival of the people through territorial compromise similar to the nation’s selective cultural adoption. By shifting from resistance to accepting removal, Boudinot chose to preserve the Cherokee Nation’s existence, even at the cost of ancestral lands.
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2025-01-01
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