Removal and Relocation Period (1828-1871): Moving Tribes West

Nearly all the eastern tribes were moved from fertile soil to the semiarid center of the country-known at the time as the Great American Desert. Consequently, today there are only a few tribes located on the east coast.

The removal policy gave way in the 1850s to an official policy of confining Indians to reservations rather than relocating them beyond the rapidly expanding frontier.

Image of map from 1836 showing lands (now present-day Oklahoma) assigned to Indians for implementation of the Indian Removal Act
Red dots show current tribal locations in the eastern United States