Removal and Resistance
to
Andrew Jackson's Hermitage 4580 Rachel's Ln, Nashville, Tennessee 37076
Andrew Jackson Foundation
FY25 Digital Signs - Removal and Resilience
Removal and Resistance
Prior to Jackson, Thomas Jefferson’s Louisiana Purchase helped to bring to life the policies that Jackson would later sign. The policies of Andrew Jackson had a drastic impact on the Indigenous nations. The Indian Removal Act had a lasting effect on tribal nations and helped to harm the culture and traditions of Indigenous people. Learn how the Louisiana Purchase and the Indian Removal Act are tied together, while also hearing how the legacy of removal lives on today, as well as the resilience of Indigenous people.
Tickets for Hermitage members are $20 and non-members are $25.
A portion of all sales will support the Andrew Jackson Foundation’s mission to preserve the home place of Andrew Jackson, create learning opportunities and inspire informed citizenship.
Heather Bruegl is an Oneida Nation of Wisconsin citizen and first-line descendent Stockbridge Munsee. She is a graduate of Madonna University in Michigan and holds a Bachelor of Arts and Master of Arts in U.S. History. Her research comprises numerous topics related to American history, legacies of colonization and Indigeneity, the history of American Boarding Schools and Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women (#MMIW). Heather has presented her work at academic institutions, including the University of Michigan, the University of Wisconsin-Madison, Bard College, Vassar College and Brooklyn Law School.
Heather consults for various museums and universities and is a frequent lecturer at conferences on topics ranging from intergenerational racism and trauma to the fight for clean water in the Native community. She has been invited to share her research on Indigenous history, including policy and activism, museum equity and Land Back initiatives for such institutions as the Tate and the Brooklyn Public Library. Heather opened and spoke at the Women’s March Anniversary in Lansing, Michigan, in January 2018 and at the first-ever Indigenous Peoples March in Washington, D.C., in January 2019. In 2019, 2020 and 2021, Heather spoke at the Crazy Horse Memorial and Museum in Custer, South Dakota, for its Talking Circle Series.
Heather is a doctoral student at the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay, where she studies First Nations Education, focusing on creating inclusive historical narratives for teaching. Heather is a public historian, activist and independent consultant who works with institutions and organizations for Indigenous sovereignty and collective liberation.