286 APPENDIX. 



Schedules op Consanguinity and Affinity of the Ganowanian Family. — Continued. 



Indian Nations. 



28. Chocta. 



29. Chocta. 



30. Chickasa. 



31. Ceeek. 



32. Cherokee. 



33. Mountain 



Cherokee. 



34. Republican 



Pawnee. 



35. Grand Pawnee. 



36. Arickaree. 



3t. Cree of the 

 Prairie. 



Names by which they call 

 themselves. 



38. Cree op the 

 Woods. 



Cha'-ta. Signification 

 lost. The name was 

 tlius pronounced to me 

 by Rev. Cyrus Bying- 

 ton, who for forty years 

 has been a missionary 

 among the Chocta ws. 



Cha'-ta. 



Not obtained. 

 Mus-co'-kee. Significa- 

 tion not obtained. 



Tsa-lo'-lice, " Great 

 People." 



Kit'-ka. Signification 



lost. 

 Cha'-we. Signification 



lost. 



Sa-nish, "The People." 



Mus-ko-ta'-we-ne-wuk', 

 "People of the Prairie 

 or Plains." The three 

 divisions of the Crees 

 by which they now 

 distinguish themselves 

 are based upon differ- 

 ences of dialect rather 

 than geographical lo- 

 cation. 



Na-he'-ah-wuk, "People 

 of the Woods." 



Persons by whom and Places where the Schedules 

 were filled. 



Rev. John Edwards, and Rev. Cyrus Byington, Mis- 

 sionaries of the Presbyterian Board of Missions, 

 Wheelock, Choctaw Nation, August, 1859, assisted 

 by Captain Joseph Dukes, a Choctaw. 



Rev. Charles C. Copeland, Missionary of the Pres- 

 byterian Board of Missions, Bennington, Choctaw 

 Nation, May, 1859. Mr. Copeland has been a 

 missionary among this people for upwards of 

 twenty years. 



Rev. Charles C. Copeland, above named. 



Ptev. R. M. Loughridge, Missionary of the Presby- 

 terian Board of Missions, Tallahasse Mission, Creek 

 Agency, west of Arkansas, January, 1860. Mr. 

 Loughridge has been a missionary for twenty years 

 among the Creeks. 



Rev. C. C. Torrey, Missionary of the American Board 

 of Commissioners for Foreign Missions, Park Hill, 

 Tahlequah, Cherokee Nation, May, 1800. 



Rev. Evan Jones, Missionary of the American Bap- 

 tist Board. Mr. Jones has been a missionary re- 

 siding with the Cherokees upwards of thirty years. 



B. F. Lushbaugh, Esq., U. S. Indian Agent for the 

 Pawnees, Genoa, Nebraska Territory, April, 1863. 



Lewis H. Morgan, at St. Mary's, Missouri River, 

 Iowa, with the assistance of Rev. S. S. Allis, 

 former Missionary of the American Board among 

 the Pawnees; and a Pawnee woman, May, 1862. 



Lewis H. Morgan, at Arickaree Tillage, LTpper Mis- 

 souri, June, 1802, assisted by Pierre Garrow, a 

 half-blood Arickaree. • 



1. Lewis H. Morgan, at Georgetown, Red River of 

 the North, July, 1861, with the assistance of Mrs. 

 A. H. Murray, of Peace River, Hudson's Bay Ter- 

 ritory, wife of A. H. Murray, Esq., one of the chief 

 factors of the Hudson's Bay Company, located at 

 Georgetown. Mrs. Murray is an educated quarter- 

 blood Cree. 



2. Rev. E. A. Walkins, Devon, Siskachewun District, 

 Hudson's Bay Territory, July, 18C2. A very com- 

 plete schedule. 



Lewis H. Morgan, at Georgetown, Red River of the 

 North, July, 1801, with the assistance of E-she- 

 kwa (Little Girl), the wife of Mr. Ohlson, a half- 

 blood Cree woman from Pembina Mountain. 



