Skip to main content

Face-to-Face: Sequoyah portrait

Producer
National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution
Associated Person
Sequoyah, c. 1770 - Aug 1843
Henry Inman, 28 Oct 1801 - 17 Jan 1846
Date
November 11, 2008
Type
Time-Based Media
Medium
Audio recording
Dimensions
Duration: 23 min., 16 sec.
Topic
Portrait
Credit Line
National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution: Audio/Visual Special Collection
Restrictions & Rights
CC0
Object number
AV.2008.EDU.12
Description
As part of the National Portrait Gallery's education program "Face-to-Face,” Francis Flavin, historian at the U.S. Department of the Interior, discusses a portrait of Sequoyah by Henry Inman. Sequoyah, the son of a Cherokee chief's daughter and a fur trader from Virginia, was a warrior and hunter and, some say, a silversmith. For twelve years he worked to devise a method of writing for the Cherokee language. His syllabary of eighty-five symbols, representing vowel and consonant sounds, was approved by the Cherokee chiefs in 1821, and the simple utilitarian system made possible a rapid spread of literacy throughout the Cherokee nation. Medicine men set down ceremonies for healing, divination, war, and traditional ball games; missionaries translated hymns and the New Testament into the native language; and in 1828 the Cherokee Phoenix, a weekly bilingual newspaper, began publication at New Echota, Georgia. This portrait of Sequoyah by artist Henry Inman, is on display in the "American Origins" exhibition on the museum's first floor. Recorded at NPG, November 11, 2008. Image info: Sequoyah / Henry Inman, c. 1830 / Oil on canvas/National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution. Face-to-Face talk currently located on the National Portrait Gallery's iTunesU page. [“Sequoyah” by Henry Inman. NPG.79.174]
Data Source
National Portrait Gallery
Location
Currently not on view