NORTHERN CHEROKEE NATION
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    • How the Deer Got His Horns
    • WHY THE DEER’S TEETH ARE BLUNT
    • What Became Of The Rabbit
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    • Origin of the Bear
    • Why The Mink Smells
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    • How The Redbird Got His Color
    • The First Fire
    • The Cherokee Legend of the First Strawberry
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    • Young Harold Mayo and the Witch Woman
    • ORIGIN OF DISEASE AND MEDICINE
    • THE LEGEND OF THE FIRST WOMEN
    • How the Rabbit stole the Otter's coat
    • How the Honey Bee got their Stinger
    • BOY AND THE RATTLESNAKE STORY
    • LEGEND OF THE TLANUHWA AND THE UHKTENA
    • Yahula
    • Bears Race with Turtle
    • Why the Owl has a Spotted Coat
    • Why the Trees Lose Their Leaves
    • Why Rabbit Has A Short Tail
    • Why the Opossum’s Tail is Bare
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THE LEGEND OF THE FIRST WOMEN

For a time, the man was very happy on Earth. He roamed around and ate the fruits
and berries and he visited the animals and he saw all his homeland. There was much
to learn and the Earth was beautiful. But before long the man grew discontented and he became
very unhappy. He didn’t know what this disease was, but it was a disease we still have, he was bored.

When he got bored, he used his mind and strength differently. He shot arrows at the
deer not really needing to. He picked the plants and didn’t use them. He tore up animal’s
dens just to see if he could do it. And soon the animals became concerned about the new creature.

The animals called a council meeting to try to determine what to do. They said they
thought this creature was supposed to have respect for other creatures, that he was given
a mind. A little insect said ‘Wait you haven’t thought this out. The Great one made him;
let’s ask him what to do.” This seemed to be a good idea. They called to the Great One to help with the new “superior” creature.

The owl said, “You told us the man had a mind and he is to respect us.” The deer said
“I don’t want to be disrespectful, but you told us the man would need more of us deer
than any other animal. If he keeps killing us like he is now, very soon there won’t be any deer left.”
“Oh,” said the Great One, “Wado, and Wado. I had not thought about something, I left out in this man.”
The bear said, “Look at him right now. He is lying out in sun with face up. No animal
will sleep right out in the open. We all know to go into a private, guarded place to rest.”

The Great One said, “Yes, there is something missing because I was
in such an excited hurry to make him. But I know now what is missing.”

“Stand back” he said. He made a green plant to grow up tall. The plant grew up right
over the man’s heart, up toward Gălûñ’lătĭ. It was a plant with long, graceful leaves and
then an ear and a golden tassel. Above the tall plant was a woman, a beautiful, tall, brown
woman growing from the stalk of corn. The man woke up and thought he was dreaming.
He rubbed his eyes and said, “This is not true. In a minute, I will wake
up and be just as bored as I was before. Oh, I am so lonely.”

The Great One sort of kicked him in the behind. “Get up you lazy thing, “the Great One said.”
Be a man for your lady”. Now no one had any reason to think this man was a mannerly
individual. Recently he certainly not been acting like a real gentleman. But we don’t have
to be taught manners. We need someone to expect the best from us and we use the
manners the Great One has already given us. So the man got up and brushed himself
off and gallantly offered his hand to the woman who came down from the stalk of corn.

The women said, “No, wait a minute.” The man didn’t argue or huff. He just waited until she asked.
She reached up and pulled two good ears of corn to take with her. Then she said, “I’m ready.”
Do you know why she wanted the corn? She couldn’t have known yet that the corn would be
and was important food, she just knew that she had sprung from
the corn and she needed to take something of her heritage with her.

The Great One remembered that although each man will sometimes
need to be alone, each man will also need a companionship to be his best.

Over a period of time, the man and women built a home where they kept the corn for planting.
The next spring, she planted her corn and it grew into a beautiful plant. It was probably
the next year that she notices a large bird would became sacred to the Cherokee, a large
bird who stays usually on the ground. We call this bird a turkey. The turkey became sacred to the
Cherokee because they could watch what he ate, and then they would know it was safe to eat.

One morning the woman noticed the turkey eating the tender corn. She knew then the corn was
food and it was time to eat the corn. That evening she set a pottery pot of corn in the middle of
her cook fire. She covered the pot with a curve of chestnut bark. When the man came in to eat his
fish stew, she didn’t tell him what she had cooked. She just pulled an ear of corn from the pot
and peeled it back so he could smell it. He thought it was the best
​aroma he had ever smelled and he began to eat the first corn of spring.

Story told by Mary Ulmer Chiltoskey

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  • Home
  • Contact / Forms
  • Council Members
  • Events
  • PowWow
    • Vendor Information
    • Booklet Memorials & Ads
  • Photos
    • PowWows Past
    • Warsaw Heritage Days
    • Old Glory Days Parade
    • Fourth of July Weekend
    • Tribal Headquarters Improvements
    • Council Meetings
    • Darkening of the Sun
  • History
    • Children Massacre at Ywahoo Falls
    • Wampum Belt
    • Leaving our homeland
    • Spanish Treaty
    • Natural Disasters
    • Forced Removal
    • States against Indians
    • New Hope
    • Legal Genocide
    • Federal Recognition
    • Bringing the Children Home
    • Historical Cherokee marriage
    • In Ancient Times I
    • The Early Times II
    • The Colonial Period III
    • Sequoyah IV
    • The Cherokee Removal V
    • The Cherokee Today VI
  • Stories
    • How the Deer Got His Horns
    • WHY THE DEER’S TEETH ARE BLUNT
    • What Became Of The Rabbit
    • The Legend of the Cherokee Rose
    • Origin of the Bear
    • Why The Mink Smells
    • Life Lesson for All Cherokee
    • How the Partridge Got His Whistle
    • How The Redbird Got His Color
    • The First Fire
    • The Cherokee Legend of the First Strawberry
    • The Sixth Sun Has Risen
    • Young Harold Mayo and the Witch Woman
    • ORIGIN OF DISEASE AND MEDICINE
    • THE LEGEND OF THE FIRST WOMEN
    • How the Rabbit stole the Otter's coat
    • How the Honey Bee got their Stinger
    • BOY AND THE RATTLESNAKE STORY
    • LEGEND OF THE TLANUHWA AND THE UHKTENA
    • Yahula
    • Bears Race with Turtle
    • Why the Owl has a Spotted Coat
    • Why the Trees Lose Their Leaves
    • Why Rabbit Has A Short Tail
    • Why the Opossum’s Tail is Bare
  • Culture
    • Cherokee Adoption, past and present
    • Roles of extended family
    • Cherokee Clan System
    • Sacred Colors
    • Entering the Circle
    • Fall Cultivation
    • Dances
    • Straight Dancing
    • The Stomp Dance
  • Artist Showcase
  • Council Minutes