What exactly did the Indian Removal Act of 1830 do? It gave American Indians the authority to move from one state to another. It gave the U.S. power to move tribes from west of the Mississippi to the East. It gave the Federal government power to enact treaties with Indian tribes. It allowed Indian tribes to remove unwanted people from their reservations.

Respuesta :

it gave the U.S. power to move tribes from the west of the Mississippi to the east. then they were put on Indians reservations.

It gave the U.S. power to move tribes from west of the Mississippi to the East.

The Indian Removal Act (1830) authorized the President (Andrew Jackson, at the time), to move the Americans tribes from their ancestral homelands in the Southern states to the territory west of the Mississippi River so white settlers and the government could use that valuable land.

The act was not a form of negotiation with Native Americans instead, it obliged tribes like the Cherokees to relocate in a new territory. And when some of the tribe's members refused to relocate, the government used force to relocate them.