Sequoyah is celebrated as an illiterate Indian genius who, solely
from the resources of his mind, endowed a whole tribe with learning;
the only man in history to conceive and perfect in its entirety an
alphabet or syllabary. He was born in the Cherokee village of
Tuskegee in Tennessee, near Fort Loudon on the Tennessee River, about
five miles from the sacred or capital town of Echota. Little is known
of his early life, though it is well established that he grew up in
the tribe unacquainted with English or civilized arts. He was a
craftsman in silver work, an ingenious natural mechanic, whose
inventive powers had scope for development in consequence of an
affliction to one of his legs that rendered him a cripple for life.
In young manhood he removed from the Overhills towns to Willstown in
the present State of Alabama.Sequoyah, whose English name was George
Guess later spelled Gist, was a soldier in the War of 1812 against
the hostile Creek Indians. On March 27, 1814 his regiment took part
in the famous Battle of the Horseshoe that inflicted a decisive
defeat on the Creeks. Soon after the opening of the nineteenth
century, Sequoyah began to realize the magic of writing. He and other
Indians at the time, who occasionally saw samples of writing and
printing, called these mysterious pages the white man’s "talking
leaf". Sequoyah began to dream hazily about an Indian "talking
leaf"; he experimented aimlessly at first, but gradually his
conception took practical shape. This was slow and laborious work for
an untutored Cherokee, and to make his efforts even more difficult,
he faced ridicule and menace from his fellow warrior, who accused him
of dealing in a sinister and black art. Even though his people one
of the Five Civilized Nations had already attained a high stage of
pastoral civilization, the significance of Sequoyah’s persistent
indoor study was a bit too much for them readily to
understand.Finally, after twelve years of labor and discouragement,
he completed his syllabary, composed of eighty-five symbols, each
representing a sound in the Cherokee spoken language. The simplicity
of the syllabary and its easy adaptability to the speech and thought
of the Cherokees enabled many of his people to master it in a few
days. The Indian nation was practically made literate within a few
months. Sequoyah, in known to have taught in the area for years after
his mother took up residence in Willstown, Alabama during the
movement of the Cherokee Nation to Oklahoma. There is a historical
marker in Valley Head, only a few miles from Sequoyah Caverns, where
it is known he taught his alphabet under a large oak tree and a
marker located in the Fort Payne Union Park.Sequoyah traveled much
between his people who had relocated in the West and those still in
the East. In 1843 Sequoyah departed for the Mexico territory (now
Texas) in order to visit with a band of Cherokees who had settled
there. While on this visit he became ill and died. While his grave
has never been authentically located, his memory will last forever
through his syllabary and through this learning and culture of a fine
body of Americans, the Cherokee people.
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