APPENDIX. 289 



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



Indian Nations. 



57. PiEQAN Black- 

 foot. 



58. Blood Black- 

 foot. 



59. Micmac. 



60. Etchemtn, or 



Malisete. 



61. MOHEGAN. 



62. Delaware. 



63. MUNSEE. 



64. Slave Lake 



Indians. 



65. Hare Indians. 



66. Red Knives. 



Names b_v which they call 

 themselves. 



Pe-kan'-ne, "Rich Peo- 

 ple." Sik-se-ka'( Black- 

 feet) is the name of 

 the Blackfeet proper. 

 They are the least of 

 the three bands. 



Ki-na, " High-minded 

 People." They former- 

 ly called themselves 

 Ah-hi'-ta-pe, "Blood 

 People." 



Not obtained. 



Not obtained. 



Mo-he'-kun-ne-uk, "Sea- 

 side People." 



O-pnh-nar'-ke, "People 

 of the East." Len-a'- 

 pe was their former 

 name, and is still used. 



Mun-sce'-wuk. 



A-cha'-o-tin-ne, " Peo- 

 ple of the Lowlands." 



Tii-na'-tin-ne. Signifi- 

 cation not obtained. 



Tal-sote'-e-na, "Red 

 Knife." 



Persons \>j whom and Places where the Schedules 

 were filled. 



67. KuTcniN, OR Ku-tchin'. Signification 



LoucHiEUX. not obtained. 



37 March, 1870. 



Lewis H. Morgan, at Selkirk Settlement, Red River 

 of the North, August, 1861, from the wife and 

 daughter of James Bird, Piegan Blackfoot women, 

 and James Bird, a half-blood Cree, as interpreter. 



Lewis H. Morgan, at Fort Benton, in the Blackfoot 

 country at the foo4, of the Rocky Mountains, June, 

 1862, from Mrs. Alexander Ciilbertson (Nii-to-is'- 

 chiks, "Medicine Snake"), above mentioned, as- 

 sisted by Alexander Culbcrtson, Esq., formerly chief 

 factor of the American Fur Company at Fort Ben- 

 ton. 



Rev. Silas Tertius Rand, Missionary of the Micmac 

 Missionary Society of Nova Scotia. Hantsport, 

 Nova Scotia, June, 1860. 



Rev. Silas Tertius Rand, above named, November, 

 1861. 



Lewis H. Morgan, at Delaware Reservation, Kansas, 

 June, 1859, with the assistance of Benjamin Tou- 

 cey and sister, educated Mohegans. 



1. William Adams, Delaware Reservation, Kansas, 

 January, 1860. William Adams is a young Dela- 

 ware, educated at the Delaware Mission in Kansas, 

 under the charge of Rev. John T. Pratt. 



2. Lewis H. Morgan, at Delaware Reservation, Kan- 

 sas, June, 1859, with the aid of Lemuel R. Ketch- 

 um (Wool-lc-kuu-num, "Light of the Sun"), a 

 Delaware. 



Lewis H. Morgan, at Chippewa Reservation, Kansas, 

 June, 1860, from Mrs. Haome Samuel (Mi-je-na- 

 oke, "Plain Looking"), a Munsce woman. She 

 spoke English fluently, as do all of the remaining 

 Munsees. 



Robert Kennicott, Esq., Fort Liard, Mackenzie River 

 District, Hudson's- Bay Territory, March, ISCO. 



Lewis H. Morgan, at Red River Settlement, Hud- 

 son's Bay Territory, August, 1861, from Angeline 

 Irvin, a half-blood native resident at Fort Good 

 Hope, and James Bird, interpreter. 



Lewis H. Morgan, at the Convent of St. Boniface, 

 Red River Settlement, Hudson's Bay Territory, 

 August, 1861, from two half-blood women of that 

 nation. 



W. L. Herdesty, Esq., Fort Liard, Hudson's Bay 

 Territory, at the request of Bernard R. Ross, Esq., 

 one of the chief factors of the company. Fort 

 Simpson, by whom it was forwarded to the author. 



