REPOKT OF THE UNITED STATES GEOGRAPHIC BOARD. 



147 



Habana; Principal City of Cuba. (Not 

 Havana.) 



Habushi; Rock (iaw), lat 34° 21' N., 

 long. 133° 42' E., Inland Sea, Japan, 

 (Not Ten feet nor Ten Feet.) 



Hacho; Island (to), lat. 34° 18' N., 

 long. 126° 03' E., southwestern coast 

 of Clio.sen (Korea). (Not Won.) 



Hackataid ; see Hakataia. 



Hacker; Bend, Mississippi River, Alex- 

 ander County, 111. (Not Hacker's.) 



Hackett; Point, Annapolis Roads, 

 Anne Arundel County, Md. (Not 

 Hackett's.) 



Hadd; Cape (ras), Oman, Arabian 

 Peninsula. (Not Cape el Hadd, Ras 

 Al Had, Ras al Hadd, nor Ras el 

 Hadd.) 



Hadweenzic; River, tributary to the 

 Yukon River, on right bank between 

 Chandalar and Dall Rivers, Alaska. 

 (Not Orensic.) 



Hagan; Post Light, Missouri River, 

 Cole County, Mo. (Not Hagan's.) 



Hageman: see Camp Hagernian. 



Hagemeister; Island, Bristol Bay, 

 Alaska. (Not Hagenmeister. ) 



Hagues; Peak (altitude, 13..562 feet), 

 Front Range, sees. 13 and 14 T. 6 N., 

 R. 74 W., Larimer County, Colo. 



Hahn; H aim's Peak; see Hahns Peak. 



Hahns Peak; Mountain, Precinct, and 

 Village, Routt County, Colo. (Not 

 Hahn, Hahn's Peak, nor Hantz.) 



HauJaraJxid ; Haiderahud; see Hydera- 

 bad. 



Hai Fony; see Haifong. 



Haifong; Seaport, Tonkin, French In- 

 do-China. (Not Hai Fong, Hai 

 Phong, Hai Phong, Hai-phong, nor 

 Haiphong.) 



Hai Funo ; see Haifong. 



Hai Ho; see Pei. 



Hainan; Island, belonging to China, 

 Kwangtung Province, separating the 

 Gulf of Tonkin from the China Sea. 



Hai Phony; see Haifong. 



Hai Piny; see Hoifung. 



Haiti; Island and Republic, West In- 

 dies, (Not Hayti.) Haiti was the 

 native name of the island when 

 Columbus landed, on December 6, 

 1492, and called it Espagnola, which 



was Latinized into Hispaniola. The 

 French colony which gained control 

 of a part of the island was called 

 Saint Domingue, and in 1795, when 

 France acquired title to the entire 

 island by treaty with Spain, it was 

 called Saint Domingue ; but when 

 the French were driven out and in- 

 dependence declared, in 1804, the 

 aboriginal name Haiti was revived 

 by the negroes. Shortly after this 

 the Spaniards reestablished them- 

 selves in the eastern part of the 

 island, retaining the French name 

 modified to Santo Domingo, but in 

 1821 lost control, and from 1822 to- 

 1843 the whole island was under one 

 government as the Republic of Haiti. 

 In 1844 the eastern portion of the 

 island again assei'ted its indepen- 

 dence of Haiti and established the 

 Dominican Republic, which remains 

 to the present day. Thus to-day the 

 island of Haiti, which seems to be 

 the proper name, consists of two 

 countries, Haiti on the west end and 

 r>ominican Republic on the east 

 end.— R. C. 



Haiyona ; see Hanani. 



Hakataia; Canyon, in the north wall 

 of the Grand Canyon of the Colo- 

 rado, Coconino County, Ariz. (Not 

 Hackataia. 



Hakodate; Seaport of Japan. (Not 

 Hakodadi.) 



Halcomh; see Holcomb. 



Hale; Passage, Washington Sound, 

 San Juan County, Wash. (Not 

 Hale's.) 



Hale; Point, Mississippi River, Lau- 

 derdale County, Tenn. (Not Hale's 

 Point.) 



Half breed; Creek, entering Mussel- 

 shell River at Roundup, Musselshell 

 County, Mont. (Not Half Breed 

 nor Wild Horse.) 



Half-Brecd; see Halfbreed. 



Half Moon; Mountains, T. 34 N., R. 

 108 W., south of Half Moon Lake, 

 Fremont County, Wyo. 



Half moon; Lighthouse and Shoal, Gal- 

 veston Bay, Tex. (Not Half Moon.) 



