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Devils Tower, A legend of Devil
Photographer: Vintage postcard c.1992
Caption: Devils Tower, A legend of Devil's Tower
Additional Description: Legends are stories that are passed down over many generations that explain important events to a culture. Various legends are told about the origin of Devil's Tower. There are many Native American Groups who have many different legends about the Tower. This popular version was told at Visitors Center c. 1992:
THE LEGEND
One day, an Indian tribe was camped beside a river and seven small girls were playing at a distance. The region had a large bear population and a bear began to chase the girls. They ran back toward their village, but the bear was about to catch them. The girls jumped upon a rock about three feet high and began to pray to the rock, "Rock, take pity on us; Rock, save us." The rock heard the pleas of the young girls and began to elongate itself upwards, pushing them higher and higher out of reach of the bear. The bear clawed and jumped at the sides of the rock, and broke its claws and fell to the ground. The bear continued to jump at the rock until the girls were pushed up into the sky, where they are to this day in a group of seven little stars (the Pleides). The marks of the bear claws are there yet. As one looks upon the tower and contemplates its uniqueness, it isn't hard to imagine this legend as a fact.
See link : How is Devils Tower A Sacred Site to American Indians?
Submitted: February 4, 2009, by Mike Stroud of Bluffton, South Carolina.
Database Locator Identification Number: p52113
File Size: 0.044 Megabytes

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