Principal Chief Levi Colbert (Itawamba Mingo) and…
October 1832 CE
The area ceded includes the entire northern one-sixth of the state of Mississippi.
The treaty follows an earlier agreement to move west of the Mississippi in 1830 which the Chickasaw refused to honor after discovering the poor nature of the land they received.
Pressured by the aggression of the State of Mississippi to establish its jurisdiction over the natives, Chickasaw Chiefs relent in 1832 to President Andrew Jackson's and his representatives offer of relocation in the west.
The treaty is part of the greater Indian Removal policy, originally proposed by President Thomas
Jefferson, by which the Five Civilized Tribes are to allow for white settlement in the south by ceding their territory and relocating west of the Mississippi River.
It is one of several removal treaties signed by the Muscogee, Choctaw, Chickasaw, and Cherokee in the 1830s relocating them to the new territories in present-day Oklahoma and Arkansas.
The Chickasaw were essentially doomed to removal with the others, when, in 1806 Jefferson promised the southern states that the Federal Government would encourage the migration of all natives to land west of the Mississippi.
The other factor underlying the removal of the natives is land speculation, one of the primary sources of money for the landed aristocracy of the South since the early days of the Virginia colony.
The trio of Andrew Jackson, John Coffee and James Jackson (unrelated), were each land speculators, militiamen and politicians who worked the cessions of huge tracts of Indians lands, the defeat of native resistance and eventually the complete removal of the Chickasaw, as well as the rest of the Five Civilized Tribes, to make way for white settlers—often at great personal profit.
The treaty will lead to the Chickasaw Trail of Tears, by which the entire Chickasaw Nation will emigrate to new territory in present-day Oklahoma in 1837-1838.