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Tahlequah, Oklahoma
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==History== === Background === [[Tahlonteeskee, Oklahoma|Tahlonteeskee]] was the first established governmental capital of any kind in what was to become Oklahoma.<ref name="encyclo">[http://www.okhistory.org/publications/enc/entry.php?entry=SE022 ''Sequoyah County'']; Oklahoma Historical Society online; accessed April 2018</ref><ref name="marker">[http://www.waymarking.com/gallery/image.aspx?f=1&guid=9f83181e-ff2f-41a5-86f2-ff575a6a0a12 ''Tahlonteeskee'']; photo of roadside marker [Oklahoma Historical Society]; at waymarking.com; accessed November 2015.</ref> It was established in 1828—in land that was part of 1816's [[Lovely's Purchase|Lovely Donations]], becoming the first Cherokee Nation–West capital city. It continued as the capital until 1839 when new arrivals from the [[Trail of Tears]] flooded the area. At that time, Takatoka briefly became the Nation's capital during the construction of the capitol building at Tahlequah. By mid-1840, the seat of government had been officially moved to Tahlequah.<ref name="encyclo" /> By 1842, Tahlequah was a growing community and had four stores. The town site of {{convert|160| acres}} was surveyed in 1843, and in the same year an intertribal council attracted ten thousand participants representing 21 different tribes. In 1844 the National Hotel was built, and the newspaper ''Cherokee Advocate'' issued its first edition using a printing press installed in the brand-new Supreme Court building. The first school opened in 1845, and the Tahlequah post office opened in 1847. The Cherokee Male Seminary opened in 1851, offering higher education to Cherokee boys who had already received their primary education.<ref name= "EOHC-Tahlequah">[https://www.okhistory.org/publications/enc/entry.php?entry=TA002 Harrington, Beth. "Tahlequah." ''Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture.'' 2009.] Accessed November 8, 2019.</ref>{{efn|The Cherokee Female Seminary, which performed a parallel function for Cherokee girls, also opened in 1851 at Park Hill.<ref name="EOHC-Tahlequah"/>}} ===Etymology=== {{Cleanup lang |section=yes |small=yes |iso=chr |date=November 2024 }}<!-- also add the [[Cherokee syllabary]] for the words! --> [[File:Cherokee stop sign.png|thumb|left|upright=0.7|Cherokee stop sign with [[Cherokee language]] transliteration and the [[Cherokee syllabary]] in Tahlequah, Oklahoma, with "alehwisdiha" (also spelled "halehwisda") meaning "stop"]] [[File:Cwy no parking.jpg|thumb|left|upright=0.7|Cherokee traffic sign in Tahlequah, Oklahoma, reading "tla adi yigi", meaning "no parking" from "tla" meaning "no"]] Many linguists believe the word 'Tahlequah' (Tah-le-quah) and the word 'Teh-li-co' are the same as 'di li gwa', the Cherokee word for grain or rice. (See Cherokee Nation Lexicon (dikaneisdi) at cherokee.org under culture/language). Scholars report the Cherokee word 'di li gwa' describes a type of native grain with a red hue that grew in the flat open areas of east Tennessee. One area, [[Great Tellico]] ([[Tellico Plains, Tennessee]]), was named for the grass with the red seed tops. Others interpret a word 'tel-i-quah' as 'plains'; however, there is no word for 'plains' in the Cherokee lexicon, and the word 'tel-i-quah' is not found in the lexicon. The idea that 'tahlequah' means 'plains' lends weight to the belief that the name refers to the wide open grassy areas of Great Tellico. Local legend states the name is derived from Cherokee words 'ta-li' and 'ye-li-quu' meaning 'just two' or 'two is enough'. Supposedly three tribal elders had planned to meet to determine the location of the Cherokee Nation's permanent capital. Two elders arrived and waited for the third. As dusk approached, they decided that 'two is enough', or 'ta-li-ye-li-quu' which later became anglicanized to Tahlequah. According to tribal elders and Cherokee County elders, this legend first began to circulate in the 1930s. Tahlequah was a settlement as early as 1832. After the Western Cherokee agreed in 1834 to let the newer migrants settle near them, they joined their government with the Eastern Cherokee at Tahlequah in 1839. Tahlequah was named long before it was chosen as the Cherokee capital. ===Cherokee Nation capital=== In 1839, Tahlequah was designated the capital of ancestors of both the Cherokee Nation and the United Keetoowah Band of Cherokee Indians. Initially the government buildings were a complex of log or framed structures. Most of these buildings were destroyed during the Civil War, during which the Cherokee became divided into two bitterly opposing sides. The Cherokee Supreme Court Building, located in downtown Tahlequah and constructed in 1844, is the oldest public building in Oklahoma.<ref name="ReferenceA">Martindale, Robert. "Cherokee Nation places three historical buildings in trust", ''Tulsa World'', 28 June 2003</ref> Several markers of Cherokee and Native American heritage are found in town: street signs and business signs are noted in both the Cherokee language and English. Such signs use the [[Cherokee syllabary|syllabary]] created by [[Sequoyah]], a Cherokee scholar of the 1820s who created the writing system. ===Post Civil War rebuilding and development=== After the war, a brick capitol was built and first occupied in 1870. In 1907, at the time of Oklahoma statehood, the building was converted into the [[Cherokee County, Oklahoma|Cherokee County]] courthouse. It was returned to the Cherokee Nation in 1970.<ref name="Harrington">[http://www.okhistory.org/publications/enc/entry.php?entry=TA002 Harrington, Beth. "Tahlequah," ''Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture'', 2009.] Accessed March 30, 2015.</ref> In 1886, the first telephone company in Indian Territory was built. The Cherokee Female Seminary, which had originally been constructed in Park Hill, burned in 1887, and was rebuilt in Tahlequah. After statehood, it was taken over by the state to become Northeastern State Normal School and the Northeastern State Teachers College (now [[Northeastern State University]]). The first bank in the Cherokee Nation opened in 1891 on Muskogee Avenue. A major fire destroyed much of downtown Tahlequah in 1895. The buildings destroyed were mostly wooden and were replaced with brick structures. In 1902, the [[Ozark and Cherokee Central Railway]]{{efn|OCCR was soon afterwards bought by the St. Louis and San Francisco Railway (aka Frisco).<ref name="Mullins">[https://www.muskogeephoenix.com/news/three-forks-history-muskogee-once-served-by-five-railroads/article_abf6adf8-a8f9-5078-ae05-3895b5551c9d.html Mullins, Jonita. "Three Forks History: Muskogee once served by five railroads." ''Muskogee Phoenix''. November 28, 2015.] Accessed November 8, 2019.</ref>}} built a line into Tahlequah.<ref name="Harrington"/> Tahlequah continued to grow. During the 1990s, it was the fourth fastest growing city in Oklahoma.
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