What was the outcome of the Worcester v. Georgia court case?



The Cherokees won the right to stay on their land and were deemed an independent nation.



The Cherokees lost their case and were forced to leave their land in Georgia.



Under Andrew Jackson's influence, the Court ruled that the Cherokees were not an independent nation.



The Cherokees won the right to gain supplies and land when they relocated to another state.

Respuesta :

Hi. The outcome of the Worcester and Georgia court case is that the Cherokees won the right to stay on their land and were deemed an independent nation.

I hope this helps.

Take care,
Diana

Answer:

Under Andrew Jackson's influence, the Court ruled that the Cherokees were not an independent nation.

Explanation:

The ruling of the US Supreme Court in the case Worcester v. Georgia (1832) is one of the most important decisions in the history of US jurisprudence. The president of the Supreme Court at the time was John Marshall, former Secretary of State of US President John Adams.

The question concerned the Cherokee Indians, and their removal from the lands of the state of Georgia. The Indians lived peacefully in their lands thanks to ancient peace treaties carried out in 1791 with the United States. They had their own laws and a proper state. But in 1828 gold was discovered in their possessions and Georgia took advantage of the opportunity to declare all previous agreements null and void in order to recover valuable lands and assets contained in them. The Indians then recurred with the help of the missionary Samuel Austin Worcester.

The Supreme Court declared the unconstitutionality of the state law, as only the federal government could express itself on the question of the Cherokee.

President Andrew Jackson, supporting the state of Georgia, allowed that the Indians were driven from the territory under the threat of weapons, in what was called the Trail of Tears.