BULL. 30] 



CAJATS CALAPOOYA 



187 



or tribe mentioned to Joutel in 1687 

 (Margry, Dec, iii, 409, 1878), while he 

 was staying with the Kadohadaclio on 

 Red r. of Louisiana, by the chief of that 

 tribe as being among his enemies. 



Cajats. A former Chumashan village 

 near Hanta Barbara, Cal. — Taylor in Cal. 

 Farmer, Apr. 24, 1863. 



Cojats,— Bancroft, Nat. Races, i, 469, 1874 (mis- 

 quoted from Taylor) . 



Cajon (Span. : ' box' canyon). A Die- 

 guefio settlement about 1850, so called 

 after a mountain pass about 10 ni. n. e. 

 of San Diego harbor, s. Cal. — Hayes MS. 

 cited by Bancroft, Nat. Races, i, 458, 1882. 



Cajpilili. A former Chumashan village 

 near Santa Barbara, Cal. — Taylor in Cal. 

 Farmer, Apr. 24, 1863. 



Cajuenche. A Yuman tribe speaking 

 the Cocopa dialect and residing in 1775-76 

 on the E. bank of the Rio Colorado below 

 the mouth of the Gila, next to the Quig- 

 yuma, their rancherias extending s. to 

 about lat. 32° 33^ and into central s. Cali- 

 fornia, about lat. 33° 08^, where they met 

 the Comeya. At the date named the Ca- 

 juenche are said to have numbered 3,000 

 and to have been enemies of the Cocopa 

 (Garces, Diary, 443, 1900). Of the disap- 

 pearance of the tril)e practically nothing 

 is known, but if they are identical with 

 the Cawina, or C^uo-kim, as they seem to 

 be, they had become reduced to a mere 

 remnant by 1851, owing to constant 

 wars with the Yuma. At this date Bart- 

 lett reported only 10 survivors living with 

 the Pima and Maricopa, only one of 

 whom understood his native language, 

 which was said to differ from the Pima 

 and Maricopa. Merced, San Jacome, and 

 San Sebastian have been mentioned as 

 Cajuenche rancherias. (f. w. n. ) 



Cafuenchi. — Esciidero, Notieias Estadisticas de 

 Chihuahua, 22.s, 1.S34. Cajuenche,— Garces (1776), 

 Diarv, 434, 1900. Carjuenche,— Forbes, Hist. Cal., 

 162, 1839. Cawina.— Bartlett, Fers. Narr., ll, 251, 

 1854. Coiuenchis. — Pike, Exiiertitious, 3d map, 

 1810. Kakhuana. — Kroeber, infri, 1905 (Mohave 

 name). Kokhuene. — Ibid. Oajuenches. — Hinton, 

 Handbook to Arizona, 2.H, 1878 (misprint). Q,uo- 

 kim.— Thomas, MS. Yuma vocab., B. A. E., 1868. 



Cajurachic. A Tarahumare settlement 

 in Chihuahua, Mexico; definite locality 

 unknown. — Orozco y Berra, Geog., 323, 

 1864. 



Calabashes. See Gourds. 



Calabazas (Span.: 'calabashes'). For- 

 merly a Sobaipuri (?) rancheria, dating 

 from the early part of the 18th century; 

 situated on the Rio Santa Cruz, below Tu- 

 baCjins. Arizona. ItwasavisitaofGuevavi 

 until that mL^sion was abandoned prior to 

 1784. A church and a house for the priest 

 were erected in 1797, before which date 

 Calabazas was probably a visita of Tubac. 

 It had 116 neophytes in 1760-64, and 64 

 in 1772, but it was described as being 

 onlv a raneho in 1828. When visited by 

 Bartlett (Pers. Narr., i, 391, 1854), in 



1851, it was in ruins, and seemed to 

 have been abandoned many years be- 

 fore, (f. w. h. ) 

 Colabazas, — Font, map (1777) in Bancroft, Ariz, 

 and X. Mex., 393, 1SS9 (misprint). San Caye- 

 tano (ie Calabazas. — Bancroft, ibid., 369,385. S, 

 Cajetanus. — Kino, map (1702) in Stocklein, Neue 



Welt-Bott, 74, 1726. S. Gaetan Kino, map (1701) 



in Bancroft, op. cit., 360. 



Calagnujuet. — A place in n. Lower Cali- 

 fornia, 8m. above Borja, at which a Jesuit 

 mission was estabjished in Oct., 1766, but 

 owing to the barrenness of the soil and 

 the alkaline water it was moved in May, 

 1767, to a site 50 m. away, where new 

 buildings were erected and where, under 

 the name Santa Maria, it soon became 

 somewhat prosperous. It was the last of 

 the mission establishments of the Jesuits 

 in Lower California, as they were ex- 

 pelled in the year last named. See Ban- 

 croft, No. Mex. States, i, 473, 1886. 



Calahuasa. The mission of Santa Inez, 

 or perhaps a Chumashan village formerly 

 at or near its site. — Tavlor in Cal. Farmer, 

 Apr. 24, 1863. 

 Calla Wassa.— Bancroft, Nat. Races, i, 459, 1874. 



Calany. A former Timuquanan tribe or 

 settlement of the Utina confederacy in 

 middleorN. Florida. — Laudonniere(1564) 

 in French, Hist. Coll. La., n. s., 243, 1869. 

 Calanay.— De Bry, Brev. Nar., ii, map, 1.591 (town 

 on an e. tributary of middle St Johns r.) Cal- 

 anio.— Barcia, Ensayo, 48, 1723. 



Calaobe. A Calusa village on the s. w. 

 coast of Florida, about 1570. — Fontaneda 

 Mem. {ca. 1575), Smith trans., 19, 1854. 

 Calaboe. — Fontaneda as quoted in Doc. InM., v, 

 539, 1866. 



Calapooya. The name, properly speak- 

 ing, of a division of the Kalapooian family 

 formerly occupying the watershed be- 

 tween Willamette and Umpquars., Oreg. 

 The term as usually employed, however, 

 • includes all the bands speaking dialects 

 of the Kalapooian language and is made 

 synonymous with the family name. This 

 double use of the term, coupled with the 

 scanty information regarding the division, 

 has wrought confusion in the classifica- 

 tion of the bands which can not be 

 rectified. The following were ascertained 

 by Gatschet to have been bands of this 

 division: Ampishtna, Tsanchifin, Tsank- 

 lightemifa, Tsankupi, and Tsawokot. 



(L. F.) 



Calahpoewah. — Lewis and Clark, Exped., ii, 227, 

 1814. Calapooa.— Parker, .Journal, 41.5, 1846. Cal- 

 apooah. — Ibid., 173, 1840. Calapoogas. — Lea in Ind. 

 Aft'. Rep., 270, 1851. Calapooias.— U. S. Stat, at 

 Large, x, 674, 18.54. Calapoolia.— Lvman in Oreg. 

 Hist. Soc. Quar., l,32,5. 1900. Calapoosas.— Miller 

 in Ind. Aff. Hep. 18,59, -J.M, 1860. Calapooyas.— Lee 

 and Frost, Oregon, 90, 1844. Calapuaya.— McClane 

 in Ind. Aff. Rep. 203, 1888. Calapuyas.— Hale in 

 U. S. Expl. Exped., vi, 198, 1846. Calipoa,— Lane 

 (1849) in Sen. Ex. Doc. 52, 31st Cong., 1st sess., 

 172, 18.50. Calipooias.— Palmer in Ind. Aff. Rep., 

 260, 1854. Calipooya.— Bi.ssell, Umpkwa MS. 

 vocab., B. A. E. Calipoyas. — Gallatin in Trans. 

 Am. Antiq. Soc, ll, map, 1836. Calipuyowes. — 

 Henry-Thompson .Tour., Cones ed., 814, 1897. 

 Cal-lah-po-e-ouah. — Nouv. Ann. Voy., 1« s., XII, 



