TENNESSEE HISTORY Classroom
FULL HISTORY STORIES


Sequoyah


He was born among the ruins of Fort Loudoun in present day Monroe County, Tenn. around the year 1760. The Cherokee infant was the son of a white trader named Nathaniel Gist. His mother was of a good Cherokee family and his uncle a chief in the tribal capitol of Echota. The boy was given the Cherokee name of Sikwa’yi or Sequoyah. In translation, it means "Pig-foot" and pointed to the fact that he was born with the congenital deformity "clubfoot"- a condition where the front part of the foot is twisted out of position. In that era of history, his name may have been a constant reminder of a disability, but it was one easily overcome by the determined Cherokee and a name that would forever be remembered in the annals of human history.



As a child, Sequoyah grew up in the Cherokee town of Tuskegee with his mother, who chose to raise the child on her own. He grew up in league with others his own age in spite of the deformity and learned the arts of hunting and fishing. The earliest mention of his childhood is at Echota where he attended at the visit of the Iroquois peace delegation in 1770.
For the most part, Sequoyah grew up in an era of constant conflict and turmoil. From the numerous intertribal conflicts with the Creeks, the American Revolution, and disputes with settlers moving into the region, Sequoyah adapted and learned. Although he assumed the name George Gist later in life in recognition of his father, no record shows he ever met or visited with the man. Sequoyah was a talented man with a gifted mind for mechanical things and learned the delicate craft of silversmithing. Like most Cherokee of the day, he also relied on hunting and fur trading to supplement his income.
By the time Sequoyah was approaching middle age, the first Christian mission was built near the tribe and offered to give the Cherokee a basic English education so they could learn to deal with the new culture that was occupying the Tennessee region.
Sequoyah never attended their schools and never learned to read, speak, or write the English language. In fact, he didn’t have much to do with the Christian missionaries at all and continued to practice his native religion. On occasion, he had visited with the Moravian Missions, however, and came away with friendly feelings towards the people, but it was not his way and Sequoyah maintained his traditionalist’s values.
Throughout his life, however, he had come to envy the settler’s way of communicating through writing. When he was given a gift of a set of silver spurs with his name engraved on them, Sequoyah would trace the letters with his fingers and roll them in his hands for hours on end. The "talking leaves" of the white man intrigued him and, by a chance discussion in 1809, Sequoyah began to work on a syllabus for his own people.
Sequoyah was always described as being of a serious and contemplative nature and capable of pondering on an idea forever. He worked diligently on wood tablets trying to devise symbols that would work.
In 1813, he left his home and entered the Cherokee Militia in Turkeytown to help in the War of 1812. When his term was up three months later, he reenlisted and marched with General Jackson to fight the "Red Stick" Creeks at the Battle of Horseshoe Bend where he served with distinction.
Following his return home, Sequoyah was seriously injured in a hunting accident that left him crippled for life. The injury gave him extra time on his hands and allowed Sequoyah to study his progress on the project. With a fresh outlook, the Tennessean soon turned back to working on a syllabus for his people.
It wasn’t an easy task for Sequoyah and often led to him being scorned or ridiculed by his wife and community. They thought he should be out making a living for his family rather than playing with the wood tablets and drawing characters. Sequoyah would fill a tablet with characters and, when one was filled, store them in a little shed near his shop to look over again and compare his work. His single-minded dedication and devotion to the project was lost on his friends and those around him. Being the subject of the community’s gossip finally turned out to be too much for his wife’s vanity.
While Sequoyah was gone from home one day, she decided to set his shed on fire and burned it to the ground with all of his experimental tablets in it. The reason being that, with the shed and tablets destroyed, Sequoyah would return to being a "normal" Cherokee and participate in the traditional activities of his tribe.
Sequoyah was devastated, but he had faced setbacks before and quickly knew how to recover from it. He divorced his wife and moved away to another Cherokee community in Alabama where he could continue his work without interruption. Sequoyah’s persistence began to start paying off for him and he started seeing the syllabus coming together.
After years of patient work, repeated failures, setbacks, and ridicule, the illiterate Cherokee silversmith finally evolved a written language for his people. It was 85 characters long and reproduced every sound made in the Cherokee language. With it, he could completely record the words of his people into a written form. The Tennessean now had to prove it would work under any circumstance or condition. He began teaching it to his beloved daughter Ayoka, who was a willing student and quickly began to learn the newly created syllabus.
In 1821, Sequoyah went before a tribal council of leading officials to prove his writing system would work. He and Ayoka wrote back and forth to one another at the demonstration. They also recorded the conversations of those present and showed how remarkably easy it was to teach others
how to do so. The syllabus was quickly recognized as an invaluable tool for the elevation of the tribe and had a liberating effect on the Cherokee. They built no schoolhouses, but turned every home and building in the Cherokee Nation into a learning academy. In the course of only a few months and without money or finances of any kind, thousands of Cherokee were able to read and write in their own language. The realization of Sequoyah’s syllabus was unbelievable. Plans were made to build a Cherokee national press, libraries, and museums at New Echota.
Even though the Christian missionaries were opposed to the new language because it was of "Indian origin", they were forced to see the advantages of a literate Cherokee Nation.
Sequoyah never stood still. He traveled west to Arkansas where he began teaching the syllabus to the tribes who were migrating away from their ancestral homeland. In 1823, the Cherokee National Council under the leadership of Chief John Ross made a public acknowledgment of Sequoyah’s accomplishment and struck a silver medal with a commemorative inscription in both English and Cherokee on both of its sides. The Tennessee Cherokee, who had faced ridicule, distrust, and numerous failures in his life, was suddenly regarded as one of the tribe’s leading men.
In the fall of 1824, a young convert named John Arch translated a portion of the Gospel of Saint John into Cherokee. It was the first time the tribe could read the Bible in their own language and it was translated hundreds of times and spread throughout the nation.
A year later, noted mixed-blood preacher David Brown completed a translation of the New Testament into Cherokee and forwarded it to Thomas McKenney at the Bureau of Indian Affairs in Washington, D.C. It was the first time the Cherokee syllabus was submitted to American officials. Sequoyah’s name and his written language spread like wildfire throughout North America.
In 1827, the Cherokee Nation convened a meeting a delegates to create a national constitution providing themselves legal sovereignty as a nation. In addition, they established a national newspaper for the Cherokee. The printing types of the characters were special ordered and created in Boston, Mass. and it took a year to get them made and in the hands of the Cherokee at New Echota. The printing paper had been overlooked and had to be sent from Knoxville to the Cherokee Capitol. On Feb. 28, 1828, Issac Harris and John Wheeler with half-blood apprentice John Candy issued the first edition of the Tsa’ lagi Tsu lehisanun’ hi, or "The Cherokee Phoenix". Elias Boudinot (Galagi’na) was the editor of the paper.
The newspaper offices were located in a log house and, while the white printers could not understand Cherokee, they set the pages up as they were handed to them.
In 1828, Sequoyah also attended Washington, D.C. as a delegate from the Arkansas tribe and was received as a hero in the nation’s capitol. The treaty made on that occasion with the government contained a provision for the payment to Sequoyah of $500 given to him "for the great benefits he has conferred on the Cherokee people, in the beneficial results which they are now experiencing from the use of the alphabet discovered by him".
Sequoyah continued to teach the language to every tribal faction or Cherokee he met. He felt it was his mission in life and it was a cause that he feverishly fought for in every corner of the Cherokee Nation. Following a Mexican proclamation that promised the Cherokee who emigrated to the country land in exchange for conversion to Catholicism and loyalty to the nation, Sequoyah learned that a tribe of his people, who did not know the language had crossed over into Mexico to live.
He traveled to find them and instruct the tribe in the Cherokee syllabus. On his way to the tribe in 1843, the Tennessean died and was buried near present day Monterrey, Mexico.
The illiterate Cherokee who revolutionized his people and his nation with an 85-character syllabus did not pass into the night unheralded or unknown. What he did in his short life was something that took entire civilizations thousands of years to accomplish.
Sequoyah is still the only human in history recognized for both creating an alphabet and a written language. The accomplishment was not lost on European nations and those educated few who understood the significance of Sequoyah’s work.
All was not easy for the Tennessee native. In many intellectual circles, a controversy raged over Sequoyah’s achievement. The use of the word "discovered" instead of "created" in the Arkansas treaty honoring him was grounds enough for many ethnologists to say the Sequoyah did not create the written Cherokee language, but rather found one that was lost. The intellects of the 19th century tried vainly to prove their theories, but were disappointed or disproved every time.
The word Sequoyah went on to become a part of the American vocabulary. In honor of him, the giant conifera trees in California were named in honor of Sequoyah and so was the 604-square-mile National Park that now protects the ancient trees. The spelling of his name is corrupted and often spelled as "Sequoia" or "Sequoya".
In Tennessee, the world-renown Cherokee scholar has a high school named after him in his native Monroe County and the region where he was born and raised also has a museum dedicated to his life and those of the Cherokee community where he grew up.
The Sequoyah Birthplace Museum is the only Indian-operated historical site in the State of Tennessee and is managed by the Eastern Band of the Cherokee Nation.
The museum is located on Citico Road in Vonore on the shores of Tellico Lake a half mile from the Fort Loudoun State Historical Park. The facility is open year round on Monday to Saturday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday noon to 5 p.m. It is closed on Thanksgiving and Christmas Day.
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For years, Cherokee experts have looked for the grave of Sequoyah, but to this day it has never been found. When he died, he was immediately buried and the gravesite never marked.
Special thanks for this story has to go to Sequoyah Birthplace Museum Director Russ Townsend, who took time to run down some of the facts surrounding Sequoyah’s life for this article. There are a lot of myths and legends surrounding the Cherokee silversmith and very few books available. The museum does stock them, however, and they are available for purchase. One of the best starter reference books available on the tribe is "The Myths and Sacred Formulas of the Cherokee" by James Mooney. It was first written around the turn of the 20th century, but has been republished on numerous occasions and is still available.
The Sequoyah Birthplace Museum also oversees the archaeological remains of the Cherokee ancient capitol of Echota and can direct you to the sites. The council house was discovered in the 1970’s and the foundations of the seven pillars found representing the Seven clans of the Cherokee. The site is still used as a sacred ceremonial site by the Cherokee. In addition, the museum grounds feature a shrine that contains the remains of over 800 Cherokee exhumed from the land around the Little Tennessee Valley prior to the Tennessee Valley Authority’s flooding of the river into Tellico Lake.
The Sequoyah Birthplace Museum will be hosting its annual Sequoyah Festival and Pow-Wow on September 12 and 13. The annual event is one of their biggest attractions and brings people from all across America to the ancient sites of the Cherokee. It is the same weekend as the "Fort Loudoun 18th Century Trade Faire" and a shuttle bus will be available between the two events. Driver Pheasant, William Crowe, and officials from the Eastern Band of the Cherokees will be among the special guests at the event. Everyone is invited to attend. For more information on the museum’s hours and the 1998 Sequoyah Festival and Pow-Wow, you can call (423) 884-6469.
The intellectual prejudice against Sequoyah continued for many years following his death. In fact, it was one of the principal reasons Smithsonian archaeologist John Emmert was digging around the Bat Creek section of the Little Tennessee Valley when he uncovered the controversial "Bat Creek Stone" bearing what many believe today to be a paleo-Hebraic inscription. At first, it was thought to be a remnant of an ancient Cherokee writing system. In fact, Smithsonian Director Cyrus Thomas’ final report on the mound survey excavations labeled the artifact’s inscription as "beyond question, letters from an ancient Cherokee alphabet said to have been invented by George Guess. (sic) A half-breed Cherokee about 1821."
The Cherokee were undaunted by the controversy and Sequoyah’s language is still used in both the Eastern and Western Bands, but has seen its popularity decline over the years. In the late 19th and early 20th century, its use was discouraged by the white teachers in Cherokee schools, who would wash Cherokee children’s’ mouths out with soap if they ever heard them speaking the "Indian language" in class. The method of punishment had an impact on efforts to preserve the language.
The Cherokee are today the most populous tribe in North America and their language is at the top of the preservation list among Cherokee scholars. There has been a revival of late to keep the Cherokee language alive through publication of books and audiotapes. While there is a regional difference between the Eastern and Western dialects, both are working to continue teaching those of Cherokee ancestry the Cherokee syllabus created by Sequoyah. An Eastern Band Language course is expected to be released soon.
The traditional story-telling means of historic preservation still exist among the Cherokee and, like most Native American tribes, is still a principal means of relating events from the past.
The sudden transformation of the Cherokee Nation into a literate society did have its drawbacks. It intimidated the Georgia State government, who almost immediately declared the Cherokee noncitizens and began the motions to have them removed. Both of the white printers of the Cherokee Phoenix were jailed and open season practically declared on the Cherokee Nation. Even though the U.S. Supreme Court ruled later the Cherokee were a legal nation with the rights and privileges of one, President Andrew Jackson opted to remove the tribe to Oklahoma during their greatest period of advancement. While their dreams of museums, presses, and libraries did not come true in Georgia, the Cherokee Reservation in North Carolina and the Western Band in Oklahoma saw to their construction following the removal and today are among the best institutions on Native American culture.
Sequoyah’s accomplishment also changed the way scientists and sociologists would come to think about the evolution of cultures. It disproved the accepted theories that advancement and technology evolve forward at a predictable pace and showed evidence that it could easily burst forward without the devastating results that are often imagined. In short, it was an achievement that both changed the world and how we think about the human condition to this day.