Answer:
Andrew Jackson ignored a Supreme Court ruling and forced the Cherokee to move.
The Walla Walla Council was held in 1885, in Waiilatpu, in the Walla Walla Valley in the state of Oregon.
That treaty defined the lives of tribes like Umatilla, Cayuse, and Walla Walla when the U.S. government invited the tribes to the council in order to protect the interest of their tribes.
The tribes attended to protect their sacred lands and did not want to surrender their culture neither their freedom.
Before the council was held, government employees destroyed Indian economies, divided the territories, and offered their sacred lands outsiders.
Answer:
The Whiskey Rebellion The (1) Farmers in western Pennsylvania objected to paying a social tax on (2) whiskey. An armed protest, called the (3) Whiskey Rebellion, was crushed by an army led by (4) Washington. Struggle Over the West George Washington hoped that the treaties with the Native Americans would lessen the influence of the (5) British and the (6) Spanish, but American settlers ignored the treaties. Fighting broke out and more than 600 American troops died in a battle by the (7) Wabash River. In 1794, the British governor of Canada urged Native Americans to destroy American settlements west of the (8) Appalachians. On August 20, 1794, General Anthony Wayne defeated Shawnee leader, Blue Jacket, and his warriors at the (9) Battle of fallen Timbers. Wayne forced twelve Native American nations to sign the (10) Treaty of Greenville which opened most of Ohio to white settlement. Problems with Europe Americans in the (11) South tended to side with France, while (12) manufacturers and merchants, who traded with Great Britain, favored Great Britain. On April 22, 1793, Washington issued a (13) Proclamation of neutrality that prohibited American citizens from fighting in the war between Great Britain and France. Few Americans supported (14) Jay’s Treaty with the British because it did not deal with (15) Impressment or British interference with Americans.
Explanation: