This
compact history is the first
to explore two landmark U.S.
Supreme Court cases of the
early 1830s: Cherokee Nation
v. Georgia and Worcester
v. Georgia. Legal historian
Jill Norgren details the extraordinary
story behind these cases, describing
how John Ross and other leaders
of the Cherokee Nation, having
internalized the principles
of American law, tested their
sovereignty rights before Chief
Justice John Marshall in the
highest court of the land.
The Cherokees’ goal was
to solidify these rights and
to challenge the aggressive
actions that the government
and people of Georgia carried
out against them under the
aegis of law. Written in a
style accessible both to students
and to general readers, The
Cherokee Cases is an ideal
guide to understanding the
political development of the
Cherokee Nation in the early
nineteenth century and the
tragic outcome of these cases
so critical to the establishment
of U.S. federal Indian law.
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