Step 1 : Introduction to the question "For what is the Cherokee leader Sequoyah remembered?"
...Sequoyah was the son of Nathaniel Gist, a Virginia fur trader, and his Cherokee mother Wuh-the of the Paint Clan of Tennessee. Raised by his mother, he never learned to read, write or speak English. He became convinced, however, that the secret to the white people's success was their written language. It was the written language that allowed them to collect and share more knowledge than could a people dependent on memory and a spoken language alone. He began working on a system of writing in 1809 and created 86 symbols to represent the syllables of the Cherokee language. Source: Britannica.com