fbpx
Wikipedia

Worcester v. Georgia

Worcester v. Georgia, 31 U.S. (6 Pet.) 515 (1832), was a landmark case in which the United States Supreme Court vacated the conviction of Samuel Worcester and held that the Georgia criminal statute that prohibited non-Native Americans from being present on Native American lands without a license from the state was unconstitutional. The opinion is most famous for its dicta, which laid out the relationship between tribes and the state and federal governments. It is considered to have built the foundations of the doctrine of tribal sovereignty in the United States.

Worcester v. Georgia
Argued February 20, 1832
Decided March 3, 1832
Full case nameSamuel S. Worcester v. State of Georgia
Citations31 U.S. 515 (more)
6 Pet. 515; 8 L. Ed. 483
Case history
PriorPlaintiff convicted in Gwinnett County, Georgia by the Georgia Superior Court (September 15, 1831)
SubsequentNone
Holding
Worcester's conviction is void because states have no criminal jurisdiction in Indian Country.
Court membership
Chief Justice
John Marshall
Associate Justices
William Johnson · Gabriel Duvall
Joseph Story · Smith Thompson
John McLean · Henry Baldwin
Case opinions
MajorityMarshall, joined by Johnson, Duvall, Story, Thompson
ConcurrenceMcLean
DissentBaldwin
Laws applied
U.S. Const. art. I

Background edit

Samuel Austin Worcester was a missionary to the Cherokee, translator of the Bible, printer, and defender of the Cherokee's sovereignty. He collaborated with Elias Boudinot in the American Southeast to establish the Cherokee Phoenix, the first Native American newspaper.

During this period, the westward push of European-American settlers was continually encroaching on Cherokee territory, even after they had made some land cessions to the US government. With the help of Worcester and his sponsor, the American Board made a plan to fight the encroachment by using the courts. They wanted to take a case to the U.S. Supreme Court to define the relationship between the federal and state governments, and establish the sovereignty of the Cherokee nation. Hiring William Wirt, a former U.S. Attorney General, the Cherokee argued their position before the U.S. Supreme Court in Georgia v. Tassel (the court granted a writ of error for a Cherokee convicted in a Georgia court for a murder occurring in Cherokee territory, though the state refused to accept the writ) and Cherokee Nation v. Georgia (1831) (the court dismissed this on technical grounds for lack of jurisdiction).[1] In writing the majority opinion, Chief Justice Marshall described the Cherokee Nation as a "domestic dependent nation" with no rights binding on a state.[2]

Worcester and eleven other missionaries met and published a resolution in protest of an 1830 Georgia law prohibiting all white men from living on Native American land without a state license.[2] While the state law was an effort to restrict white settlement on Cherokee territory, Worcester reasoned that obeying the law would, in effect, be surrendering the sovereignty of the Cherokee Nation to manage their own territory. Once the law had taken effect, Governor George Rockingham Gilmer ordered the militia to arrest Worcester and the others who signed the document and refused to get a license.[1]

After two series of trials, all eleven men were convicted and sentenced to four years of hard labor at the state penitentiary in Milledgeville. Nine accepted pardons, but Worcester and Elizur Butler declined their pardons, so the Cherokee could take the case to the Supreme Court. William Wirt argued the case, but Georgia refused to have a legal counsel represent it, because the state believed the Supreme Court did not have authority to hear the case.[3]

Decision edit

Chief Justice John Marshall laid out in this opinion that the relationship between the Indian Nations and the United States is that of nations. He reasoned that the United States, in the character of the federal government, inherited the legal rights of The Crown. Those rights, he stated, included the sole right to negotiate with the Indian nations of North America, to the exclusion of all other European powers. This did not include the rights of possession to their land or political dominion over their laws. He acknowledged that the exercise of conquest and purchase can give political dominion, but those are in the hands of the federal government, and individual states had no authority in American Indian affairs. Georgia's statute was therefore invalid.

Associate Justice Henry Baldwin dissented, stating that, in his opinion, the record was not properly returned upon the writ of error, and ought to have been returned by the State court of Georgia, and not by the clerk of the Court of Gwinnett County. As to the merits, he said that his opinion remained the same as was expressed by him in the case of the Cherokee Nation v. Georgia in 1831.[4]

Marshall's language in Worcester may have been motivated by his regret that his earlier opinions in Fletcher v. Peck and Johnson v. McIntosh had been used as a justification for Georgia's actions. Joseph Story considered it similarly, writing in a letter to his wife dated March 4, 1832: "Thanks be to God, the Court can wash their hands clean of the iniquity of oppressing the Indians and disregarding their rights."[5]

Enforcement edit

 
Samuel Worcester

In a popular quotation that is believed to be apocryphal, President Andrew Jackson reportedly responded: "John Marshall has made his decision; now let him enforce it!"[6][7] This quotation first appeared twenty years after Jackson had died, in newspaper publisher Horace Greeley's 1865 history of the U.S. Civil War, The American Conflict.[7] It was, however, reported in the press in March 1832 that Jackson was unlikely to aid in carrying out the court's decision if his assistance were to be requested.[8] In an April 1832 letter to John Coffee, Jackson wrote that "the decision of the Supreme Court has fell still born, and they find that they cannot coerce Georgia to yield to its mandate."[6][9] In a letter in March 1832, Virginia politician David Campbell reported a private conversation in which Jackson had "sportively" suggested calling on the Massachusetts state militia to enforce the order if the Supreme Court requested he intervene, because Jackson believed Northern partisans had brought about the court's ruling.[9]

The Court did not ask federal marshals to carry out the decision.[10] Worcester thus imposed no obligations on Jackson; there was nothing for him to enforce,[11][12] although Jackson's political enemies conspired to find evidence, to be used in the forthcoming political election, to claim that he would refuse to enforce the Worcester decision.[13] Under the Judiciary Act of 1789, Supreme Court cases were to be remanded back down to the lower court for final execution of the Supreme Court's judgment. The Supreme Court could only execute the final judgment in cases where the lower court failed to act on the Supreme Court's directive.[14] Shortly after the Supreme Court's ruling had been issued in March 1832, the court recessed for the term, and would not convene again for the following term until January 1833.[15][16]

The Supreme Court's March 3, 1832 ruling ordered that Samuel Worcester and Elizur Butler be freed from prison.[17] On March 17, Worcester's lawyers petitioned the Georgia court to release Worcester, but the court refused.[17] Over the following months, Worcester's lawyers petitioned the newly elected governor of Georgia, Wilson Lumpkin, to offer an unconditional pardon, but Lumpkin declined on the basis that the federal government was overstepping its authority.[18] At the same time, the federal government, under Secretary of War Lewis Cass, began an intensive campaign to secure a removal treaty with the Cherokee nation, which would render the Supreme Court decision and Worcester's continued political imprisonment inconsequential.[19] On November 6, Lumpkin delivered his annual message to the Georgia state legislature, announcing he would continue to resist the Supreme Court's decision:

"The Supreme Court of the United States . . . have, by their decision, attempted to overthrow the essential jurisdiction of the State, in criminal cases . . . I have, however, been prepared to meet this usurpation of Federal power with the most prompt and determined resistance."[20][17]

 
Wilson Lumpkin, Governor of Georgia, 1831-35

Eighteen days later, on November 24, the state of South Carolina issued an Ordinance of Nullification, a separate and unrelated attempt by a state to defy federal authority.[17] This began a series of events known as the Nullification Crisis. In an effort to isolate Georgia from South Carolina, the Jackson administration changed course in their approach to the Worcester decision. Secretary of War Lewis Cass, U.S. Senator John Forsyth of Georgia, incoming Vice President Martin Van Buren, and Van Buren's political allies of the Albany Regency began to lobby Lumpkin to offer a pardon, citing the probability that a removal treaty with the Cherokees could be achieved once Worcester and Butler were released from prison.[21] To sustain his states' rights position, Lumpkin stipulated that Worcester and Butler had to petition for the pardon with an admission they had violated state law. The two missionaries at first refused, because the Supreme Court decision had ruled they had not broken any law. The two decided to continue their appeal once the Supreme Court convened in early 1833.[22]

The national situation began to deteriorate in December. On December 8, Andrew Jackson issued a Nullification Proclamation, denouncing nullification in South Carolina, declaring secession to be unconstitutional, and proclaiming the United States government would resort to force if South Carolina did not back down.[23][24] Further entreaties by Georgia politicians and representatives of the federal government convinced Worcester and Butler of the risk to the Cherokee nation if Georgia were to join South Carolina's attempt at secession. Worcester and Butler began to reconsider their appeal to the Supreme Court.[25]

On December 22, Georgia repealed the law that had put Worcester and Butler in prison, allowing them to petition for a pardon without having to take an oath to leave the state of Georgia or Cherokee land.[26] On January 8, 1833, the missionaries petitioned for their pardon, but it did not contain an admission they had broken state law, and Lumpkin believed its wording was insulting to the state of Georgia. Representatives for both sides negotiated for a new letter to be drafted by the missionaries, which was delivered to Lumpkin the following day. In the final letter, Worcester and Butler appealed to the "magnanimity of the State" of Georgia to end their prison sentences.[27] On January 14, Lumpkin issued a general proclamation,[28] not a formal pardon.[29] Worcester and Butler were freed from prison.[30]

Two days later, on January 16, President Andrew Jackson sent a message to Congress requesting the military power to put down the South Carolina insurrection. This request would be granted in the form of the Force Bill.[30] Worcester and Butler were criticized by supporters of the Nullification effort, accusing them of aiding Jackson's effort to inaugurate war against South Carolina.[31]

On January 19, Worcester and Butler arrived back at New Echota, the capital of the Cherokee Nation.[32] In February, they sent a letter to the Missionary Herald, explaining that their abandonment of the Supreme Court case was "not . . . from any change in our views, but on account of changing circumstances".[33]

Aftermath edit

On December 29, 1835, members of the Cherokee nation signed the controversial removal treaty, the Treaty of New Echota, which was immediately protested by the large majority of the Cherokees.[34] Samuel Worcester moved to the Cherokee nation's western Indian Territory in 1836, after removal had commenced. Worcester resumed his ministry, continued translating the Bible into Cherokee, and established the first printing press in that part of the United States, working with the Cherokee to publish their newspaper.[2]

In his Pulitzer Prize-winning book The Supreme Court in United States History, Charles Warren asserted that the sequence of events in the aftermath of the Worcester case allowed the Supreme Court to go from its lowest point in history in late 1832, to its strongest position in fifteen years by early 1833.[35][34] In 2000, Justice Stephen Breyer observed that the Supreme Court was an "obvious winner" in the case once its judgment was enforced, but the Cherokee nation was the "obvious loser" since the judgment did not benefit them in any way.[36] Because Jackson proceeded with Cherokee removal, Worcester did not aid indigenous rights at the time.[36] Removal of the Cherokee nation would begin just three years after Samuel Worcester and Elizur Butler were released from Georgia prison, and forced migration would commence via the Trail of Tears in 1838.[37]

Worcester has been cited in several later opinions on the subject of tribal sovereignty in the United States. In 2022, the Court ruled on Oklahoma v. Castro-Huerta, a case that resulted from the Court's earlier decision in McGirt v. Oklahoma that the tribal lands in the eastern half of Oklahoma had never been disestablished by Congress, and as a result, crimes committed on tribal lands by Native Americans were considered to be covered by tribal and federal jurisdiction rather than the state. Castro-Huertra was decided to clarify that crimes committed by non-Native Americans on tribal lands would have simultaneous jurisdiction by both federal and state. Justice Brett Kavanaugh, writing the majority in Castro-Huetra, stated that "the Worcester-era understanding of Indian country as separate from the State was abandoned later in the 1800s", based on both United States v. McBratney and Draper v. United States.[38]

In popular culture edit

The 2018 play Sovereignty by Mary Kathryn Nagle portrays the historic circumstances surrounding the case.[39]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Garrison 2004.
  2. ^ a b c Mize.
  3. ^ Sundquist 2010, p. 243.
  4. ^ "Worcester v. Georgia, 31 U.S. 515 (1832)". Justia Law. Retrieved June 24, 2022.
  5. ^ Warren 1922, p. 216.
  6. ^ a b Boller & George 1989, p. 53.
  7. ^ a b Miles 1973, p. 519.
  8. ^ Miles 1973, p. 529.
  9. ^ a b Miles 1973, p. 528-29.
  10. ^ Berutti 1992, pp. 305–06.
  11. ^ Banner 2005, pp. 218–24.
  12. ^ Norgren 2004, pp. 122–30.
  13. ^ Ellis, Richard E. (1987). The Union at Risk: Jacksonian Democracy, States' Rights and the Nullification Crisis. Oxford University Press. p. 31. ISBN 978-0-19-802084-4.
  14. ^ Miles 1973, p. 527.
  15. ^ Miles 1973, p. 528.
  16. ^ Warren 1922, p. 224.
  17. ^ a b c d Breyer 2000, p. 224.
  18. ^ Miles 1973, p. 531-532.
  19. ^ Miles 1973, p. 530.
  20. ^ Lumpkin 1907, pp. 103–104.
  21. ^ Miles 1973, p. 535-537.
  22. ^ Miles 1973, pp. 533–537.
  23. ^ Miles 1973, p. 533-534.
  24. ^ Breyer 2000, p. 225-226.
  25. ^ Miles 1973, p. 537-538.
  26. ^ Miles 1973, p. 535.
  27. ^ Miles 1973, p. 540-541.
  28. ^ Lumpkin 1833.
  29. ^ Chused 1988.
  30. ^ a b Miles 1973, p. 541.
  31. ^ Miles 1973, p. 542.
  32. ^ Missionary Herald 1833, p. 113.
  33. ^ Miles 1973, p. 543.
  34. ^ a b Breyer 2000, p. 226.
  35. ^ Warren 1922, pp. 229–238.
  36. ^ a b Breyer 2000, p. 227.
  37. ^ Sundquist 2010, pp. 247–248.
  38. ^ Fletcher, Matthew (June 29, 2022). "In 5-4 ruling, court dramatically expands the power of states to prosecute crimes on reservations". SCOTUSBlog. Retrieved June 29, 2022.
  39. ^ Collins-Hughes 2018.

References edit

  • Banner, Stuart (2005). How the Indians Lost Their Land: Law and Power on the Frontier. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
  • Berutti, Ronald A. (1992). "The Cherokee Cases: The Fight to Save the Supreme Court and the Cherokee Indians". American Indian Law Review. 17 (1): 291–308. doi:10.2307/20068726. JSTOR 20068726.
  • Boller, Paul F.; George, John H. (1989). They Never Said It: A Book of False Quotes, Misquotes, & False Attributions. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. p. 53. ISBN 978-0-19-506469-8.
  • Breyer, Stephen (2000). "The Cherokee Indians and the Supreme Court". Journal of Supreme Court History. 23 (3): 215–227. doi:10.1111/1059-4329.00009. S2CID 142991886.
  • Burke, Joseph C. (1969). "The Cherokee Cases: A Study in Law, Politics, and Morality". Stanford Law Review. Vol. 21, No. 3. 21 (3): 500–531. doi:10.2307/1227621. JSTOR 1227621.
  • Chused, Richard (1988). Cases, Materials, and Problems in Property (2nd ed.). New York: M. Bender. ISBN 0-8205-4135-4.
  • Collins-Hughes, Laura (January 17, 2018). "Fighting for Native Americans, in Court and Onstage". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved March 30, 2018.
  • Garrison, Tim Alan (April 27, 2004). "Worcester v. Georgia (1832)". The New Georgia Encyclopedia. Georgia Humanities and University of Georgia Press.
  • Lumpkin, Wilson (1907). DeRenne, Wymberley Jones (ed.). The Removal of the Cherokee Indians from Georgia. Vol. 1. Wymberley Jones DeRenne.
  • Lumpkin, Wilson (1833). . Southeastern Native American Documents, 1730-1842, Felix Hargrett Papers, Hargrett Rare Book and Manuscript Library, The University of Georgia Libraries. Digital Library of Georgia. Archived from the original on March 25, 2017. Retrieved June 13, 2016.
  • Lytle, Clifford M. (1980). "The Supreme Court, Tribal Sovereignty, and Continuing Problems of State Encroachment into Indian Country". American Indian Law Review. 8 (1): 65–77. doi:10.2307/20068139. JSTOR 20068139.
  • Miles, Edwin A. (1973). "After John Marshall's Decision: Worcester v. Georgia and the Nullification Crisis". The Journal of Southern History. 39 (4): 519–544. doi:10.2307/2205966. JSTOR 2205966.
  • Mize, Richard. "Worcester, Samuel Austin (1778-1859)". Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture. Oklahoma Historical Society. Retrieved March 29, 2013.
  • Norgren, Jill (2004). The Cherokee Cases: Two Landmark Federal Decisions in the Fight for Sovereignty. Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press.
  • Prucha, Francis Paul (1984). The Great Father: The United States Government and the American Indians. Vol. I. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 0-8032-3668-9.
  • "Release of the Imprisoned Missionaries". Missionary Herald. Vol. 29. American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions. March 1833. pp. 81–116. Retrieved June 29, 2020.
  • Smith, Jean Edward (1996). John Marshall: Definer Of A Nation. New York: Henry Holt & Company. ISBN 0-8050-1389-X.
  • Sundquist, Matthew L. (2010). "Worcester v. Georgia: A Breakdown In The Separation Of Powers". American Indian Law Review. 35 (1): 239–255. JSTOR 41148666.
  • Warren, Charles (1922). The Supreme Court in United States History. Vol. 2. Boston, MA: Little, Brown.

Further reading edit

  • Robertson, Lindsay G. (2005). Conquest by Law: How the Discovery of America Dispossessed Indigenous Peoples of Their Lands. New York, NY: Oxford University Press.

External links edit

  •   Works related to Worcester v. Georgia at Wikisource
  • Text of Worcester v. Georgia, 31 U.S. (6 Pet.) 515 (1832) is available from: Findlaw  Justia  Library of Congress  OpenJurist 
  • Worcester v. Georgia in the New Georgia Encyclopedia
  • Worcester, Samuel A. "Account of S[amuel] A. Worcester's second arrest, 1831 July 18 / S[amuel] A. Worcester". Southeastern Native American Documents, 1730-1842. Tennessee State Library and Archives. Retrieved February 21, 2018.[permanent dead link]

worcester, georgia, 1832, landmark, case, which, united, states, supreme, court, vacated, conviction, samuel, worcester, held, that, georgia, criminal, statute, that, prohibited, native, americans, from, being, present, native, american, lands, without, licens. Worcester v Georgia 31 U S 6 Pet 515 1832 was a landmark case in which the United States Supreme Court vacated the conviction of Samuel Worcester and held that the Georgia criminal statute that prohibited non Native Americans from being present on Native American lands without a license from the state was unconstitutional The opinion is most famous for its dicta which laid out the relationship between tribes and the state and federal governments It is considered to have built the foundations of the doctrine of tribal sovereignty in the United States Worcester v GeorgiaSupreme Court of the United StatesArgued February 20 1832Decided March 3 1832Full case nameSamuel S Worcester v State of GeorgiaCitations31 U S 515 more 6 Pet 515 8 L Ed 483Case historyPriorPlaintiff convicted in Gwinnett County Georgia by the Georgia Superior Court September 15 1831 SubsequentNoneHoldingWorcester s conviction is void because states have no criminal jurisdiction in Indian Country Court membershipChief Justice John Marshall Associate Justices William Johnson Gabriel DuvallJoseph Story Smith ThompsonJohn McLean Henry BaldwinCase opinionsMajorityMarshall joined by Johnson Duvall Story ThompsonConcurrenceMcLeanDissentBaldwinLaws appliedU S Const art I Contents 1 Background 2 Decision 3 Enforcement 4 Aftermath 5 In popular culture 6 Notes 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksBackground editSamuel Austin Worcester was a missionary to the Cherokee translator of the Bible printer and defender of the Cherokee s sovereignty He collaborated with Elias Boudinot in the American Southeast to establish the Cherokee Phoenix the first Native American newspaper During this period the westward push of European American settlers was continually encroaching on Cherokee territory even after they had made some land cessions to the US government With the help of Worcester and his sponsor the American Board made a plan to fight the encroachment by using the courts They wanted to take a case to the U S Supreme Court to define the relationship between the federal and state governments and establish the sovereignty of the Cherokee nation Hiring William Wirt a former U S Attorney General the Cherokee argued their position before the U S Supreme Court in Georgia v Tassel the court granted a writ of error for a Cherokee convicted in a Georgia court for a murder occurring in Cherokee territory though the state refused to accept the writ and Cherokee Nation v Georgia 1831 the court dismissed this on technical grounds for lack of jurisdiction 1 In writing the majority opinion Chief Justice Marshall described the Cherokee Nation as a domestic dependent nation with no rights binding on a state 2 Worcester and eleven other missionaries met and published a resolution in protest of an 1830 Georgia law prohibiting all white men from living on Native American land without a state license 2 While the state law was an effort to restrict white settlement on Cherokee territory Worcester reasoned that obeying the law would in effect be surrendering the sovereignty of the Cherokee Nation to manage their own territory Once the law had taken effect Governor George Rockingham Gilmer ordered the militia to arrest Worcester and the others who signed the document and refused to get a license 1 After two series of trials all eleven men were convicted and sentenced to four years of hard labor at the state penitentiary in Milledgeville Nine accepted pardons but Worcester and Elizur Butler declined their pardons so the Cherokee could take the case to the Supreme Court William Wirt argued the case but Georgia refused to have a legal counsel represent it because the state believed the Supreme Court did not have authority to hear the case 3 Decision editChief Justice John Marshall laid out in this opinion that the relationship between the Indian Nations and the United States is that of nations He reasoned that the United States in the character of the federal government inherited the legal rights of The Crown Those rights he stated included the sole right to negotiate with the Indian nations of North America to the exclusion of all other European powers This did not include the rights of possession to their land or political dominion over their laws He acknowledged that the exercise of conquest and purchase can give political dominion but those are in the hands of the federal government and individual states had no authority in American Indian affairs Georgia s statute was therefore invalid Associate Justice Henry Baldwin dissented stating that in his opinion the record was not properly returned upon the writ of error and ought to have been returned by the State court of Georgia and not by the clerk of the Court of Gwinnett County As to the merits he said that his opinion remained the same as was expressed by him in the case of the Cherokee Nation v Georgia in 1831 4 Marshall s language in Worcester may have been motivated by his regret that his earlier opinions in Fletcher v Peck and Johnson v McIntosh had been used as a justification for Georgia s actions Joseph Story considered it similarly writing in a letter to his wife dated March 4 1832 Thanks be to God the Court can wash their hands clean of the iniquity of oppressing the Indians and disregarding their rights 5 Further information George Corn TasselEnforcement edit nbsp Samuel WorcesterIn a popular quotation that is believed to be apocryphal President Andrew Jackson reportedly responded John Marshall has made his decision now let him enforce it 6 7 This quotation first appeared twenty years after Jackson had died in newspaper publisher Horace Greeley s 1865 history of the U S Civil War The American Conflict 7 It was however reported in the press in March 1832 that Jackson was unlikely to aid in carrying out the court s decision if his assistance were to be requested 8 In an April 1832 letter to John Coffee Jackson wrote that the decision of the Supreme Court has fell still born and they find that they cannot coerce Georgia to yield to its mandate 6 9 In a letter in March 1832 Virginia politician David Campbell reported a private conversation in which Jackson had sportively suggested calling on the Massachusetts state militia to enforce the order if the Supreme Court requested he intervene because Jackson believed Northern partisans had brought about the court s ruling 9 The Court did not ask federal marshals to carry out the decision 10 Worcester thus imposed no obligations on Jackson there was nothing for him to enforce 11 12 although Jackson s political enemies conspired to find evidence to be used in the forthcoming political election to claim that he would refuse to enforce the Worcester decision 13 Under the Judiciary Act of 1789 Supreme Court cases were to be remanded back down to the lower court for final execution of the Supreme Court s judgment The Supreme Court could only execute the final judgment in cases where the lower court failed to act on the Supreme Court s directive 14 Shortly after the Supreme Court s ruling had been issued in March 1832 the court recessed for the term and would not convene again for the following term until January 1833 15 16 The Supreme Court s March 3 1832 ruling ordered that Samuel Worcester and Elizur Butler be freed from prison 17 On March 17 Worcester s lawyers petitioned the Georgia court to release Worcester but the court refused 17 Over the following months Worcester s lawyers petitioned the newly elected governor of Georgia Wilson Lumpkin to offer an unconditional pardon but Lumpkin declined on the basis that the federal government was overstepping its authority 18 At the same time the federal government under Secretary of War Lewis Cass began an intensive campaign to secure a removal treaty with the Cherokee nation which would render the Supreme Court decision and Worcester s continued political imprisonment inconsequential 19 On November 6 Lumpkin delivered his annual message to the Georgia state legislature announcing he would continue to resist the Supreme Court s decision The Supreme Court of the United States have by their decision attempted to overthrow the essential jurisdiction of the State in criminal cases I have however been prepared to meet this usurpation of Federal power with the most prompt and determined resistance 20 17 nbsp Wilson Lumpkin Governor of Georgia 1831 35Eighteen days later on November 24 the state of South Carolina issued an Ordinance of Nullification a separate and unrelated attempt by a state to defy federal authority 17 This began a series of events known as the Nullification Crisis In an effort to isolate Georgia from South Carolina the Jackson administration changed course in their approach to the Worcester decision Secretary of War Lewis Cass U S Senator John Forsyth of Georgia incoming Vice President Martin Van Buren and Van Buren s political allies of the Albany Regency began to lobby Lumpkin to offer a pardon citing the probability that a removal treaty with the Cherokees could be achieved once Worcester and Butler were released from prison 21 To sustain his states rights position Lumpkin stipulated that Worcester and Butler had to petition for the pardon with an admission they had violated state law The two missionaries at first refused because the Supreme Court decision had ruled they had not broken any law The two decided to continue their appeal once the Supreme Court convened in early 1833 22 The national situation began to deteriorate in December On December 8 Andrew Jackson issued a Nullification Proclamation denouncing nullification in South Carolina declaring secession to be unconstitutional and proclaiming the United States government would resort to force if South Carolina did not back down 23 24 Further entreaties by Georgia politicians and representatives of the federal government convinced Worcester and Butler of the risk to the Cherokee nation if Georgia were to join South Carolina s attempt at secession Worcester and Butler began to reconsider their appeal to the Supreme Court 25 On December 22 Georgia repealed the law that had put Worcester and Butler in prison allowing them to petition for a pardon without having to take an oath to leave the state of Georgia or Cherokee land 26 On January 8 1833 the missionaries petitioned for their pardon but it did not contain an admission they had broken state law and Lumpkin believed its wording was insulting to the state of Georgia Representatives for both sides negotiated for a new letter to be drafted by the missionaries which was delivered to Lumpkin the following day In the final letter Worcester and Butler appealed to the magnanimity of the State of Georgia to end their prison sentences 27 On January 14 Lumpkin issued a general proclamation 28 not a formal pardon 29 Worcester and Butler were freed from prison 30 Two days later on January 16 President Andrew Jackson sent a message to Congress requesting the military power to put down the South Carolina insurrection This request would be granted in the form of the Force Bill 30 Worcester and Butler were criticized by supporters of the Nullification effort accusing them of aiding Jackson s effort to inaugurate war against South Carolina 31 On January 19 Worcester and Butler arrived back at New Echota the capital of the Cherokee Nation 32 In February they sent a letter to the Missionary Herald explaining that their abandonment of the Supreme Court case was not from any change in our views but on account of changing circumstances 33 Aftermath editOn December 29 1835 members of the Cherokee nation signed the controversial removal treaty the Treaty of New Echota which was immediately protested by the large majority of the Cherokees 34 Samuel Worcester moved to the Cherokee nation s western Indian Territory in 1836 after removal had commenced Worcester resumed his ministry continued translating the Bible into Cherokee and established the first printing press in that part of the United States working with the Cherokee to publish their newspaper 2 In his Pulitzer Prize winning book The Supreme Court in United States History Charles Warren asserted that the sequence of events in the aftermath of the Worcester case allowed the Supreme Court to go from its lowest point in history in late 1832 to its strongest position in fifteen years by early 1833 35 34 In 2000 Justice Stephen Breyer observed that the Supreme Court was an obvious winner in the case once its judgment was enforced but the Cherokee nation was the obvious loser since the judgment did not benefit them in any way 36 Because Jackson proceeded with Cherokee removal Worcester did not aid indigenous rights at the time 36 Removal of the Cherokee nation would begin just three years after Samuel Worcester and Elizur Butler were released from Georgia prison and forced migration would commence via the Trail of Tears in 1838 37 Worcester has been cited in several later opinions on the subject of tribal sovereignty in the United States In 2022 the Court ruled on Oklahoma v Castro Huerta a case that resulted from the Court s earlier decision in McGirt v Oklahoma that the tribal lands in the eastern half of Oklahoma had never been disestablished by Congress and as a result crimes committed on tribal lands by Native Americans were considered to be covered by tribal and federal jurisdiction rather than the state Castro Huertra was decided to clarify that crimes committed by non Native Americans on tribal lands would have simultaneous jurisdiction by both federal and state Justice Brett Kavanaugh writing the majority in Castro Huetra stated that the Worcester era understanding of Indian country as separate from the State was abandoned later in the 1800s based on both United States v McBratney and Draper v United States 38 In popular culture editThe 2018 play Sovereignty by Mary Kathryn Nagle portrays the historic circumstances surrounding the case 39 Notes edit a b Garrison 2004 a b c Mize Sundquist 2010 p 243 Worcester v Georgia 31 U S 515 1832 Justia Law Retrieved June 24 2022 Warren 1922 p 216 a b Boller amp George 1989 p 53 a b Miles 1973 p 519 Miles 1973 p 529 a b Miles 1973 p 528 29 Berutti 1992 pp 305 06 Banner 2005 pp 218 24 Norgren 2004 pp 122 30 Ellis Richard E 1987 The Union at Risk Jacksonian Democracy States Rights and the Nullification Crisis Oxford University Press p 31 ISBN 978 0 19 802084 4 Miles 1973 p 527 Miles 1973 p 528 Warren 1922 p 224 a b c d Breyer 2000 p 224 Miles 1973 p 531 532 Miles 1973 p 530 Lumpkin 1907 pp 103 104 Miles 1973 p 535 537 Miles 1973 pp 533 537 Miles 1973 p 533 534 Breyer 2000 p 225 226 Miles 1973 p 537 538 Miles 1973 p 535 Miles 1973 p 540 541 Lumpkin 1833 Chused 1988 a b Miles 1973 p 541 Miles 1973 p 542 Missionary Herald 1833 p 113 Miles 1973 p 543 a b Breyer 2000 p 226 Warren 1922 pp 229 238 a b Breyer 2000 p 227 Sundquist 2010 pp 247 248 Fletcher Matthew June 29 2022 In 5 4 ruling court dramatically expands the power of states to prosecute crimes on reservations SCOTUSBlog Retrieved June 29 2022 Collins Hughes 2018 References editBanner Stuart 2005 How the Indians Lost Their Land Law and Power on the Frontier Cambridge MA Harvard University Press Berutti Ronald A 1992 The Cherokee Cases The Fight to Save the Supreme Court and the Cherokee Indians American Indian Law Review 17 1 291 308 doi 10 2307 20068726 JSTOR 20068726 Boller Paul F George John H 1989 They Never Said It A Book of False Quotes Misquotes amp False Attributions New York NY Oxford University Press p 53 ISBN 978 0 19 506469 8 Breyer Stephen 2000 The Cherokee Indians and the Supreme Court Journal of Supreme Court History 23 3 215 227 doi 10 1111 1059 4329 00009 S2CID 142991886 Burke Joseph C 1969 The Cherokee Cases A Study in Law Politics and Morality Stanford Law Review Vol 21 No 3 21 3 500 531 doi 10 2307 1227621 JSTOR 1227621 Chused Richard 1988 Cases Materials and Problems in Property 2nd ed New York M Bender ISBN 0 8205 4135 4 Collins Hughes Laura January 17 2018 Fighting for Native Americans in Court and Onstage The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved March 30 2018 Garrison Tim Alan April 27 2004 Worcester v Georgia 1832 The New Georgia Encyclopedia Georgia Humanities and University of Georgia Press Lumpkin Wilson 1907 DeRenne Wymberley Jones ed The Removal of the Cherokee Indians from Georgia Vol 1 Wymberley Jones DeRenne Lumpkin Wilson 1833 Proclamation 1833 Jan 14 Georgia to Charles C Mills Wilson Lumpkin Governor of Georgia Southeastern Native American Documents 1730 1842 Felix Hargrett Papers Hargrett Rare Book and Manuscript Library The University of Georgia Libraries Digital Library of Georgia Archived from the original on March 25 2017 Retrieved June 13 2016 Lytle Clifford M 1980 The Supreme Court Tribal Sovereignty and Continuing Problems of State Encroachment into Indian Country American Indian Law Review 8 1 65 77 doi 10 2307 20068139 JSTOR 20068139 Miles Edwin A 1973 After John Marshall s Decision Worcester v Georgia and the Nullification Crisis The Journal of Southern History 39 4 519 544 doi 10 2307 2205966 JSTOR 2205966 Mize Richard Worcester Samuel Austin 1778 1859 Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture Oklahoma Historical Society Retrieved March 29 2013 Norgren Jill 2004 The Cherokee Cases Two Landmark Federal Decisions in the Fight for Sovereignty Norman OK University of Oklahoma Press Prucha Francis Paul 1984 The Great Father The United States Government and the American Indians Vol I Lincoln University of Nebraska Press ISBN 0 8032 3668 9 Release of the Imprisoned Missionaries Missionary Herald Vol 29 American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions March 1833 pp 81 116 Retrieved June 29 2020 Smith Jean Edward 1996 John Marshall Definer Of A Nation New York Henry Holt amp Company ISBN 0 8050 1389 X Sundquist Matthew L 2010 Worcester v Georgia A Breakdown In The Separation Of Powers American Indian Law Review 35 1 239 255 JSTOR 41148666 Warren Charles 1922 The Supreme Court in United States History Vol 2 Boston MA Little Brown Further reading editRobertson Lindsay G 2005 Conquest by Law How the Discovery of America Dispossessed Indigenous Peoples of Their Lands New York NY Oxford University Press External links edit nbsp Works related to Worcester v Georgia at Wikisource Text of Worcester v Georgia 31 U S 6 Pet 515 1832 is available from Findlaw Justia Library of Congress OpenJurist Worcester v Georgia in the New Georgia Encyclopedia Worcester Samuel A Account of S amuel A Worcester s second arrest 1831 July 18 S amuel A Worcester Southeastern Native American Documents 1730 1842 Tennessee State Library and Archives Retrieved February 21 2018 permanent dead link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Worcester v Georgia amp oldid 1181977794, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.