BULL. .''0] 



CROW TOWN CUBERO 



369 



country along the river. There was no 

 ethnic, hnguistii-, or other difference be- 

 tween them. The jMountain Crows num- 

 bered 2,700 in 1S71 and the River Crows 

 1,400 ( Pease in Ind. Aff. Rep., 420, 1871 ). 

 Present aggregate population, 1,826. See 

 Havden, Ethnog. and Philol. Mo. Valley, 

 1862; Maximilian, Trav., 1843; Dorsey 

 in nth and 15th Reps. B. A. E., 1894, 

 1897; ^NIcGee in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 1897; 

 Simms, Traditions of the Crows, 1903. 

 Absaraka.— Brackett, Absaraka MS. vocab., 

 B. A. E., 1879. Absarakos.— Warren, Nebr. and 

 Ariz., 50, 1.S75. Absaroka. — Schoolcraft, Ind. 

 Tribes, 1,259, 18.51. Ab-sar'-o-kas. — .Morgan in N. 

 Am. Rev., 47,1870. Absarokes.— Schoolcraft, Ind. 

 Tribes, i, .iL'3, 1851. Absaroki.— .Am. Natnr.,829, 

 1882. Absoroka.— Drake, Bk. Inds., x, 1S48. A-i- 

 nun'. — Havden, Ethnog. and Philol. Mo. Valley, 

 32(), 1862 ('Crow people': Arapaho name). Ap- 

 sah-ro-kee. — Bonner, Life of Beckwonrth. 298, 

 18.56(trans. I'sparrowhawkpoople'). Apsarraka. — 

 Everette in Pilling, Proof Sheets, 942, l.s,s5. Apsa- 

 ruka. — Ma.ximilian, Trav., 174,1843. Ap-sha-roo- 

 kee. — Orig. Jour. Lewis and Clark, vi, 267, 1905. 

 Atsharoke.— Smet, Letters, 51, 1843 (trans. ' crow ', 

 attributed to their robberies). Aub-sa'-ro-ke. — 

 Hayden, Ethnog. and Philol. Mo. Valley, 402, 

 1862 (own name: 'anything that fiies'). Cor- 

 beaus. — Orig. ,Io>ir. Lewis and Clark, vi, 103, 1905. 

 Corbeauz. — Perrin du Lac, Voy. dans les Louis- 

 ianes, 337, 1805. Crow Indians. — Orig. Jour. Lewis 

 and Clark, l, 189, 1904. De Corbeau.— Clark (1804) 

 in Orig. .lour. Lewis and Clark, i, 130. 1904. de 

 Curbo. — Ibid. Gensdes Corbeau. — Lewisand Clark, 

 Disco v., 41, 1806 (French name). Hahderuka.— 

 Maximilian, Trav., 174, 1843 (Mandan name). 

 Haideroka, — Ibid. (Hidatsa name). Hapsa-ro- 

 kay. — Gebow, Sho-sho-nay Vocab., 8, 1868 (Sho- 

 shoni name). Hapsaroke. — Burton, City of Saints, 

 151, 1861. Hounena. — .V. L. Kroeber, inf'n, 1905 

 (Arapaho name: 'crow men'). I-sa-po'-a. — Hay- 

 den, Ethnog. and Philol. Mo. Valley, '264, 1862 (Sik- 

 sika name). Issappo'. — Tims, Blackfoot Gram. 

 and Diet., 125, 1889 (Siksika name; sing. Issilpjio'- 

 ekuvln). Kangitoka. — lapi Oaye, xiii, no. 9, 33, 

 1884 (Yankton name: 'raven foes'). Kaij-gi'-wi- 

 ca-sa. — Cook, MS. Yankton vocab., B. A. E., 184, 

 1882. Ka'-xi.— Dorsey, Winnebago MS., B.A.E., 

 18.S6 (Winnebago name). Kee'-hat-sa. — Orig. Jour. 

 Lewis and Clark, vr. 103, 1905. Keeheet-sas.— 

 M'Vickar, Hist. Exped. Lewis and Clark, i, map, 

 1842. Kee'-kat'-sa. — Lewis and Clark, Discov.,41, 

 1806. Kilinatsa.— Matthews,IIidatsa Inds., 39,1877 

 (Hidatsa name: 'they who refused the paunch'). 

 Kikastas. — Keane in Stanford, Compend., 518, 

 1878. Kiqatsa.— Am. Naturalist, 8'29, Oct., 1882. 

 Kite.— Orig. Jour. Lewis and Clark, I, 130, 1904 

 (De Corbeau or). Kokokiwak. — Gatschet, FoxMS., 

 B. A. E.,1,S82 (Fox name), long Haired Indians, — 

 Sanford, U. S., clxvii, 1819. O-e'-tun'-i-o.— Hav- 

 den, Ethnog. and Philol. Mo. Valley, '290, 1862 

 (Cheyenne name). 0-tun-nee. — Bonner, Life of 

 Beckwourth, 452, 1856 (Cheyenne name: * crow ' ). 

 Par-is-cd-oh-pan-ga. — Long, Exped. Rocky Mts., 

 II, Ixxxiv, 18'23 (Hidatsa name: 'crow people'). 

 Ravin Indians. — Orig. Jour. Lewis and Clark, I, 

 2'20, 1904. Steamtshi.— Hoffman in Proc. Am. 

 Philos. Soc, 371, 1886 (Salish name). Stemchi.— 

 Giorda, Kalispelm Diet., pt. 2, 81, 1879 (Kalispel 

 name). Stemtchi.— Gatschet, Salish MS., B. A. E., 

 1884 (Salish name). Stimk.— Gatschet, Okinagin , 

 MS.,B.A.E.,1884(Okinaganname). Upsaraukas,— ' 

 Browne in Beach, Ind. Miscel., 83, 1877. Upsaro- 

 cas.— Keane in Stanford, Compend., 470, 1878. 

 TJp-sa-ro-ka. — Long, Exped. Rocky Mts., ll, Lxxix, 

 18'23 (own name). TJp-shar-look-kar.— Orig. Jour. 

 Lewis and Clark (1806), v, 21, 1905 (Chopunnish 

 name). tXpsook.— Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, iv, 

 181, 18.")4. Up-sor-ah-kay. — Anon. CrowMS. vocab.. 

 B. A. E. Yax-ka'-a.— Gatschet, Wandot MS., B. 

 A. E.,1S81 (Wyandot name: 'crow'). 



Crow Town (trans, of Xdgimi/I, 'crow 

 place,' from M^g{i 'crow%' y1 locative). 



Bull. 30—05 24 



A former Cherokee town on the left 

 bank of Tennessee r., near the mouth of 

 Raccoon cr., Cherokee co., n. e. Ala. 

 It was one of the so-called "live lower 

 towns" built by those Cherokee, called 

 Chickamauga, who were hostile to the 

 American cause during the Revolutionary 

 period, and whose settlements farther up 

 the river had been destroyed by Sevier 

 and Campbell in 1782. The population 

 of Crow Town and the other lower set- 

 tlements was augmented by Creeks, Shaw- 

 nee, and white Tories until it reached a 

 thousand warriors. The towns were de- 

 stroyed in 1794. See Moonev in 19th 

 Rep. B. A. E., 54, 1900. 



Crow-wing. Mentioned by Neill (Hist. 

 Minn., 386, 1858) as one of the Chippewa 

 bands that took part in the treaty of 

 1826. There was a village of the same 

 name at the mouth of Crow Wing r., in 

 X. central INIinnesota, which was the 

 home of Hole-in-the-Day in 1838. 



Cuaburidurch. A former Maricopa 

 rancheria on the Rio Gila, Ariz. ; visited 

 bv Father Sedelmair in 1744. — Bancroft, 

 Ariz, and N. Mex., 366, 1889. 



Cuactataugh. A village, probably ])e- 

 longing to tlie Patuxeiit, on the e. bank 

 of Patuxent r., in Anne Arundel co., Md., 

 in 1608.— Smith (1629), Virginia, i, map, 

 repr. 1819. 



Cuampis. Mentioned as a division of 

 the Faraon Apache. 



Cuampes. — Orozco y Berra, Geog., 59, 1864. Cuam- 

 pis.— Villa Senor y Sanchez, Theatre Am., ii, 

 413, 1748. 



Cuanrabi. Given as the name of a Hopi 

 village in 1598 in connection with Naybi 

 (Oraibe), Xumupami (Shumopovi), and 

 Esperiez (Onate, 1598, in Doc. Ined., xvi, 

 137, 1871). Not identified. 



Cubac. A former rancheria, probably 

 of the Papago, visited by Father (jarces 

 iii 1771; situated in the neighborhood of 

 San Francisco Ati, w. from the present 

 Tucson, s. Ariz. Distinct from Tubac. 

 Cubac.— Arricivita (1791) quoted bv Bancroft, 

 Ariz, and N. Mex., 387, 1889. Cubic— Orozco y 

 Berra, Geog., 348, 1864. 



Cubero (from Pedro Rodriguez Cubero, 

 governor of New Mexico, 1697-1703) . 

 Formerly a pueblo, established in 1697 

 l)y rebel Queres from Santo Domingo, 

 Cienegnilla, and Cochiti, 14 m. n. of Aco- 

 ma, at the site of the present town of that 

 name in New Mexico. It was probably 

 abandoned in the early part of the 18th 

 century (Bancroft, Ariz, and N. Mex., 

 221, 1889). According to Laguna tradi- 

 tion Cubero was formerly a pueblo of the 

 Laguna and Acoma people, who were 

 driven out by the Mexican colonists a 

 century ago. (f. w^ h.) 



Covera. -^Bancroft, Ariz, and N. Hex., 281, 1889 

 (or Cubero). Covero.- Emory, Recon., 133,1848. 

 Cubero. — Bancroft, op. cit. Cuvarro. — Huglies, 

 Doniphan'sExped.,149, 1848. Govero. — Eastman, 

 map in Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, iv, 24-25, 1854. 

 Punyeestye.— Powell in 7th Rep. B. A. E., 83,1891. 



