438 
Speck, FRANK G.—Continued 
1928a. Chapters in the ethnology of the 
Powhatan tribes of Virginia. 
Heye Museum, Indian Notes 
and Monogr., vol. 1, No. 5. 
New York. 
1928b. Native tribes and dialects of 
Connecticut, a Mohegan-Pe- 
quot diary. 43d Ann. Rep. 
Bur. Amer. Ethnol., 1925- 
1926, pp. 199-287. 
1940. Penobscot man. Philadelphia. 
1943a. A note on the Hassanamisco 
band of Nipmuc. Bull. Massa- 
chusetts Arch. Soc., vol. 4, 
No. 4 (July), pp. 48-56. 
1943b. A social reconnaissance of the 
Creole Houma Indian trap- 
pers of the Louisiana bayous. 
America Indigena, vol. 3, 
Nos. 2 and 3 (Apr., July), 
pp. 135-146 and 211-220. 
Mexico City. 
1947. Notes on social and economic 
conditions among the Creek 
Indians of Alabama in 1941. 
America Indigena, vol. 7, No. 
3 (July), pp. 195-198. 
Spiess, MATHIAS. 
1933. The Indians of Connecticut. New 
York. 
Storms, J. C. 
1936. Origin of the Jackson Whites of 
the Ramapo Mountains. Man- 
uscript. Park Ridge, N. J. 
SwAntTon, JOHN R. 
1934. Siouan Indians of Lumber River. 
U. S. Congress, House Rep. 
No. 1752, 73rd Congr., 2d Sess. 
6 pp. (Croatans.) 
TANTAQUIDGEON, GLADYS. 
1935. New England council fires still 
burn. Indians at Work, vol. 
2, No. 12 (eb. 1), pp. 20-24. 
TERHUNE, ALBERT P. 
1926. Treasure. 
Whites. ) 
Tuomeson, B. F. 
1943. The history of Long Island, 2d 
ed., 2 vols. Indian tribes, vol. 1 
pp. 93-96. New York. 
TOWNSEND, GEORGE A. 
1872. The swamp outlaws or the North 
Carolina bandits. New York. 
(Croatans.) 
UniTED STATES CENSUS, BUREAU OF THE. 
1894. Report on Indians taxed and 
Indians not taxed in the United 
States at the 11th Census, 1890. 
Croatans, pp. 199-500; Me- 
lungeons, p. 391; etc. 
1937. The Indian population of the 
United States and Alaska, 1930. 
New York. (Jackson 
ANNUAL REPORT SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION, 1948 
Unitep StTATEs Concress, Housr or REp- 
RESENTATIVES. 
1872. Reports of committees for the 2d 
Session of the 42d Congress. 
Rep. No. 22, pt. 2, testimony 
taken by the Joint Select Com- 
mittee to Inquire into the Con- 
dition of Affairs in the Late 
Insurrectionary States. North 
Carolina, pp. 283-304. (Croa- 
tans.) 
UniTED STATES CONGRESS, SENATE. 
1930. Catawba Indians of South Caro- 
lina. Senate Doc. No. 92, 71st 
Cong., 2d Sess. 
1931. Seminole Indians. Senate Doc. 
No. 314, 71st Cong., 3d Sess. 
UnirepD STATES WRITERS PROGRAM (FED- 
ERAL WRITERS PROJECT). 
1937. Maine, a guide “Down East,” 
pp. 241, 295. Boston. 
1938. Mississippi, a guide to the Mag- 
nolia State, pp. 465-467. New 
York. 
Texas, a guide to the Lone Star 
State, pp. 584-585. New York. 
New York, a guide to the Empire 
State, pp. 391, 424, 437, 531, 
650. New York. 
Alabama, a guide to the Deep 
South, pp. 367-368. New York. 
(Cajans and Creoles.) 
Louisiana, a guide to the State, 
pp. 390, 425-427. New York. 
New jersey. Bergen County pan- 
orama, pp. 171-180, 305. Hack- 
ensack, N. J. (Jackson Whites.) 
VAN DE WartTER, FREDERIC F. 
1922. Grey riders. ‘‘Bushwackers,” pp. 
239-260. New York. 
Wales, BeErtTHA N. 
1928. Virginians—a further study of the 
Win tribe. M. A. thesis, Uni- 
versity of Virginia. 
WELLER, GEORGE. 
1938. The Jackson Whites. New 
Yorker, vol. 14, No. 31 (Sept. 
17); pp. 29-39: 
WESLAGER, C. A. 
1943. Delaware’s forgotten folk. New 
York. (Nanticoke and Moors.) 
WHITE, ROXANA. 
1939. They stand alone: The Wesorts of 
Charles County. The Sun, Nov. 
12; sect.’ 15, Jp. 25) Baltimore; 
Md. 
Witson, E. Y. 
1895. Lost Colony of Roanoke. Cana- 
dian Mag., vol. 4 (Apr.), pp. 
500-504. (Croatans.) 
WILson, GOODRIDGE. 
1934. The southwest corner. Roanoke 
(Va.) Times, Feb. 25. (Me- 
lungeons.) 
1940a. 
1940b. 
1941a. 
1941b. 
1941c. 
