eXTReMe Tracker



The Music Playing is;
ANGEL

If you would like a copy of the song Angel click on Angel MIDI

Best viewed by;
800 by 600 resolution...

sorry your missing my music

O'siyo Oginalii Tsilugi!
Hello Friends Welcome!

My Indian heritage is Tsalagi (Cherokee).
I'm very proud of my Tsalagi heritage.....Always have been.
I admire the ideas and beliefs of the Cherokee People.
My son Billy gave me these cards with the
pretty Cherokee maidens on them for mother's day.
My Billy He was very proud of our heritage too.
I used the cards and my picture to make this background set.
And other images that I found to make all the pictures here.
Please do not remove them from my page.
Linda.......Cherokee Rose

CherokeeRose

Since I started Angelin97 back in March 1998, many of you have emailed me asking different things about my pages here. I've always answered you and simply signed my name as Linda, some have asked me my nick name. I never gave that much thought back then, I was so busy trying to put together this site. Well I have been asked to join some web rings, and other great groups of Ladies here on the WWW. And once again I've been asked for a nick name, and after thinking about this, and knowing the many tears that I cried making Angelin97 for my son Billy. Billy would, when picking a gift or cards for me choose a pretty Cherokee maiden. Many of the images on this page are cards from him. After reading The Legend of the Cherokee Rose, and with the tears that I cried......
I found my nickname.
Billy my son these pages are for you ......
My Love.....
Mom...CherokeeRose

My husbane (Dan) wrote me this poem
after he gave me the name CherokeeRose...

TO STOP THE POEM SCROLL;
PLACE YOUR MOUSE POINTER INSIDE THE POEM
TO ROLL THE POEM TEXT UP OR DOWN;
HOLD DOWN ON LEFT MOUSE BUTTON AND PUSH OR PULL THE TEXT


Lidies of the Heart

The Official Phenomenal Women Of The Web Seal
Phenomenal Women Of The Web



The History of the Cherokee People


The Cherokee were the mountaineers of the South, holding a region of approximately 40,000 square miles, including what are now the states of Virginia, Tennessee, North and South Carolina, Georgia and Alabama. Their principal towns were at the headwaters of the Savannah, Hiwassee and Tuckasegee rivers, and along the entire length of the Little Tennessee River. Echota (or Itsati) located on the south bank of the Little Tennessee was considered the Capitol of the Cherokee Nation.

The Cherokee call themselves Ani Yunwiya "The Real People" or Tsalagi,
on ceremonial occasions, they speak of themselves as Ani-Kituhwagi "people of Kituhwa",
an ancient settlement which is believed to be the origin of the tribe.



We Ani Tsalagi cannot seperate our place on earth from our lives in it, nor from our vision and meaning as a people. From birth we are taught that even the plants and animals that we share this place with, are our sisters and brothers. So when we speak of land, we do not speak of property, territory or even the piece of ground upon which our houses sit and our crops are grown. We are speaking of something truly sacred.




"We are now about to take our leave and kind farewell to our native land, the country that the Great Spirit gave our Fathers, we are on the eve of leaving that country that gave us birth...it is with sorrow we are forced by the white man to quit the scenes of our childhood... we bid farewell to it and all we hold dear."

Charles Hicks, Tsalagi (Cherokee) Vice Chief on the Trail of Tears, November 4, 1838

Legend of the Cherokee Rose (nu na hi du na tlo hi lu i)

When gold was found in Georgia, the government forgot its treaties and drove the Cherokees to Oklahoma. One fourth of them died on the journey west. When the Trail of Tears started in 1838, the mothers of the Cherokee were grieving and crying so much, they were unable to help their children survive the journey. The elders prayed for a sign that would lift the mother�s spirits to give them strength. God, looking down from heaven, decided to commemorate the brave Cherokees and so, as the blood of the braves and the tears of the maidens dropped to the ground, he turned them into stone in the shape of a Cherokee Rose. The next day a beautiful rose began to grow where each of the mother�s tears fell. The rose is white for their tears; a gold center represents the gold taken from Cherokee lands, and seven leaves on each stem for the seven Cherokee clans. No better symbol exists of the pain and suffering of the "Trail Where They Cried" than the Cherokee Rose The wild Cherokee Rose grows along the route of the Trail of Tears into eastern Oklahoma today.



Cherokee Rose Symbol of the "Nun-da-sun-'y"
"Trail Where They Cried"
The Legend of the Cherokee Rose

More than 100 years ago, the Cherokee people were driven from their home mountains when the white men discovered gold in the mountains of North Carolina and Georgia. Their journey is remembered as the Trail of Tears. Some of the people came across Marengo County in West Alabama. It seems that after they had left the mountains, they came this far south so not have to climb more mountains.

It was early summer and very hot, and most of the time the people had to walk. Tempers were short and many times the soldiers were more like animal drivers than guides for the people. The men were so frustrated with the treatment of their women and children, and the soldiers were so harsh and frustrated that bad things often happened. When two men get angry they fight and many men were killed on the trip. Many people died of much hardship. Much of the time the trip was hard and sad and the women wept for losing their homes and their children.

The old men knew that they must do something to help the women not to lose their strength in weeping. They knew the women would have to be very strong if they were to help the children survive.

So one night after they had made camp along the Trail of Tears, the old men sitting around the dying campfire called up to the Great One in Galunati (heaven) to help the people in their trouble. They told Him that the people were suffering and feared that the little ones would not survive to rebuild the Cherokee Nation.

The Great One said, "Yes, I have seen the sorrows of the women and I can help them to keep their strength to help the children. Tell the women in the morning to look back where their tears have fallen to the ground. I will cause to grow quickly a plant. They will see a little green plant at first with a stem growing up. It will grow up and up and fall back down to touch the ground where another stem will begin to grow. I�ll make the plant grow so fast at first that by afternoon they�ll see a white rose, a beautiful blossom with five petals. In the center of the rose, I will put a pile of gold to remind them of the gold which the white man wanted when his greed drove the Cherokee from their ancestral home."

The Great One said that the green leaves will have seven leaflets, one for each of the seven clans of the Cherokee. The plant will begin to spread out all over, a very strong plant, a plant which will grow in large, strong clumps and it will take back some of the land they had lost. It will have stickers on every stem to protect it from anything that tries to move it away.

The next morning the old men told the women to look back for the sign from the Great One. The women saw the plant beginning as a tiny shoot and growing up and up until it spread out over the land. They watched as a blossom formed, so beautiful they forgot to weep and they felt beautiful and strong. By the afternoon they saw many white blossoms as far as they could see. The women began to think about their strength given them to bring up their children as the new Cherokee Nation. They knew the plant marked the path of the brutal Trail of Tears. The Cherokee women saw that the Cherokee Rose was strong enough to take back much of the land of their people.


From "Aunt Mary, Tell Me A Story"


The Legend of the Corn Beads

Another plant story concerns the tears of the people. This time it concerns a plant called the medicine bead or corn bead or hippie bead (in the 60�s) or Job�s Tears.

A story says that at the time the soldiers drove the people toward the West on the Trail of Tears, these tall plants began to grow where the people wept. The plants are members of the corn family. They will grow where the seeds fall to the ground, even if they are not cultivated. They, like the Cherokee rose, are strong enough and stubborn enough to take over much of the garden.

Now the Cherokee grow these grassy plants to make beads for the tourists, but many don�t know these beads also symbolize for the people the tears of the travelers on the Trail of Tears.

From "Aunt Mary, Tell Me A Story"

Wado nasgihaihia adawadvdi Donadagohvi Tohidu
Thank You for the Visit Let us see each other again Good Peace

This Page was Made for u `sti i:.....a `tsu tsa:....My Billy
a quo hi `yu:. nv da `tsi go `i:.e `tsi....Linda
nv:..gv ni ge:...u `yv `dla:....u `no le......`tla i `go li `ga !!

Our American Heritage Is Very Important.
Without it We would not have,
What we have here Today.
I have enjoyed putting This page together for you..
Each part has a Special meaning that I will carry with me,
Always.
Thanks for Giving me the chance to Learn about my Indian
Background...And I hope everyone Else enjoy's it as well.

Hugs & Gentle Thoughts
Linda.......Cherokee Rose


ga li `ha :.. `u wo `du hi :.. `u sti :.. u `sti i :.. `tsu tsa:.. ga li `ha :..
nv :.. a `ya :.. ni `ga da:.. u `wa sa :.. e `lo `hi :.. da gi yo `we ga :.. `tla i `go li `ga :..
hi la `yu-dv a ni `lu `tsi :..




This page has been visited
[Home/Main Page]
[The Seven Clans Of The Cherokee Nation] [Cherokees Stories Page 1] [Applets by CherokeeRose]

You can travel my pages by clicking on
the drop down bar then select the page you wish to view
then click Travel My Pages. Or select from the menu list below and click on link.

Click On Any Link Below
To Travel My Pages

[Home/Main Page] [Menu Page]

[My Book of Poems] [About Angels ("information")] [Angel Art] [Applet Art ("Lake & others")]
[Angelin97's Angel Links] [Webring & Links Page 1] [Webring Page 2] [Webring Page 3]
[My i.c.q. page] [Just For Fun Page!!]
[My Son's Page] [My Grandson's Page] [Cherokee Rose]


Please sign our Guest Book &
Let us know where in the world our Angel has been seen?
Thank You

globe2.gif

Please sign our guestbook...

memories

Your visits mean a lot to me....
Click here to View our Memories Book....and our guests from the past.....
Thank You

You can email me at.
Dan Lane

DanLane@twlakes.net