APPENDIX. 



283 



ScnEDDLES OP CONSANGUINITV AND AFFINITY OF THE GaNOWANIAN FaMILY, WITH THE NaMES BY 

 WHICH THE SEVERAL NATIONS DESIGNATE THEMSELVES, AND THE NaMES OF THE PERSONS BY WHOM 

 THE SEVERAL SCHEDULES WERE PREPARED. 



ludian Nations. 



Names by which they call 

 themselves. 



Persons by whom and Places where the Schedules 

 were filled. 



1. Seneca. 



2. Cayuga. 



3. Onondaga. 



4. Oneida. 



5. Mohawk. 



6. tuscaeora. 



T. Two Mountain 

 Iroquois. 



8. Wyandote. 



9. Dakota, Isaun- 

 tie. 



10. Dakota, Yank- 

 ton. 



Nun-da'-wa-o-no, "Great 

 mil People." 



Gwe-u'-gweh-o-no', 



" People at the Mucky 



Land." 

 O-nuu'-da-ga-o-no', 



" People on the Hills." 

 0-na'-3'ote-ka-o-no', 



"Granite People." 



Gii-ne-il'-ga-o-no', "Peo- 

 ple possessors of the 

 Flint." 



Dus-ga'-o-weh-o-no', 

 "Shirt-wearing Peo- 

 ple." 



(Mohawks and Oneidas.) 



Wane-dote', "Calf of the 

 Leg." This name was 

 given to them by the 

 Iroquois, and adopted 

 by them. It relates to 

 their manner of string- 

 ing buffalo-meat. 



I-saun-tie'. They for- 

 merly lived at I-san- 

 tam-de, or Knife Lake. 

 Hence, probably, the 

 name, as Riggs con- 

 jectures. 



Yank-ton', "Village at 

 the End." (Riggs.) 



Lewis H. Morgan, at Tonawanda Indian Reserva- 

 tion, Nevtr York, December, 1858, vifith the assist- 

 ance of Miss Caroline G. Parker (Je-go'-sii-seh), 

 an educated Seneca woman. 



Lewis H. Morgan, at Tonawanda, July, 1859, with 

 the assistance of a Cayuga woman, and Miss Par- 

 ker as interpreter. 



Lewis H. Morgan, at Rochester, New York, October, 

 1859, with William Buck, an educated Onondaga. 



1. Lewis H. Morgan, at Oneida Centre, New York, 

 May, 1860, with Jas. Christian, an Oneida Indian. 



2. L. H. Morgan, at Albany, New York, February, 

 1861, with Henry Jordan, of St. Regis Reserva- 

 tion, half Oneida and half Mohawk. 



1. Lewis H. Moi'gan, at Tonawanda, January, 1860, 

 with a Mohawk from Grand River, Canada West. 



2. At Albany, February, 1861, with Henry Jordan. 



1. Lewis H. Morgan, at Tonawanda, January, 1860, 

 with a Tuscarora woman, assisted by Isaac Doctor, 

 interpreter. 



2. From Cornelius C. Cusick, of Tuscarora Reserva- 

 tion, a Tuscarora Indian, August, I860. A partial 

 schedule. 



Lewis H. Morgan, at Pomme de Terre, Minnesota, 

 July, 1861, with a Two Mountain Iroquois, then 

 returning from the Hudson's Bay territory. 



Lewis H. Morgan, at Wyandote Reservation, Kan- 

 sas, June, 1859, with the assistance of Matthew R. 

 Walker and William Walker, educated half-blood 

 Wyandotes. 



Rev. Stephen R. Riggs, Missionary of the American 

 Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, 

 made at the Dakota Indian Mission, Pajutaze, 

 Minnesota, March, 1859. 



Lewis H. Morgan, at Rulo Half-Breed Reservation, 

 Nebraska Territory, June, 1859, with the assist- 

 ance of a Yankton woman, and Charles Rulo as 

 interpreter. 



