Georgia political force
William H. Crawford hand-picked Troup as his candidate for governor in 1819. However, Troup twice lost to Crawford's bitter rival,
John Clark, who was supported by
frontier settlers. In 1823, Troup ran again, as Clark was no longer eligible, and won. He advocated the removal of the
Creek Indians from western Georgia. Troup wanted to move them to the
Western Territory of the
Louisiana Purchase, an idea first proposed by
Thomas Jefferson in 1803. In 1825, in Georgia's first popular election, Troup won by a razor-thin margin. He negotiated the controversial
Treaty of Indian Springs on February 12, 1825, with his first cousin
William McIntosh, a mixed-blood Creek chief. McIntosh and 49 other tribal leaders (predominantly from the Lower Creeks) ceded a large portion of Georgia, although they did not have the backing of the majority of the Creek Confederacy. He threatened an attack on Federal troops if they interfered with the treaty and challenged
President John Quincy Adams, who conceded and allowed Troup to seize the remaining Creek land in Georgia. During Troup's tenure as governor, he also supported
public education and the construction of new roads and
canals. Despite the recentness of the War of 1812, Troup maintained that the United States should pursue a positive relationship with
Great Britain. Troup always referred to the British in familial terms ("our cousins", "fraternal relations with England" our "sister nation") and believed that since Britain and America shared common roots, the two countries would "ultimately reunite in some form" although he believed the United States would and should "remain forever independent from, though no less loving towards, England." The European country remained most hostile to was France, Troup was very critical of both the French revolution, particularly the
Reign of Terror as well as the subsequent
Bourbon restoration government. ==Later career==