Grizzly creates Black Butte as home for his human wife and children.
Travelers on Interstate 5 between Mount Shasta and Weed, Calif., pass closely by the 6,325-foot-high Black Butte Dome. A creation myth of the Abjumawi Band of the Pitt River Indians explains its origin.
At a time when both humans and animals were considered people, the Creator lived on Mount Shasta with his son and daughter. The Creator provided Shastina dome as a private annex for the daughter, but warned against visiting the valley to the west.
Grizzly sang love songs to her, and together they roamed the valley among wild flowers and berries, meadows and streams. They had two children, and Grizzly created Black Butte for their home.
Meanwhile, humans began killing animals, upsetting the Creator’s peaceful design. Disgusted, the Creator sent his son to fetch the daughter, but angrily left Mount Shasta without her after learning she had grizzly children. Grizzly sent her home to Mount Shasta, where she still awaits her father’s return.
When Grizzly began killing to provide food for his children, the Creator condemned him to life as a bear, forced to walk on all fours and be hunted forever by humans.
Black Butte is the daughter’s empty house.
Sources: English, Jane, and Bonnie Eddy. Mount Shasta’s Black Butte. Mount Shasta City: Earth Heart, 2002. 14-15. Print.
The SOHS Library is OPEN to the public at 106 N. Central Avenue in Medford, with FREE access to the SOHS Archives, from 12:00 - 4:00 pm, Tuesday through Saturday. Appointments are not necessary. Please contact library@sohs.org, or call 541-622-2025 ex 200 to ask questions or request research.
Indian Myth Describes Creation of Black Butte Dome on Interstate 5
Episode
2575
Date