BULL. 30] 



EEL RIVER INDIANS EKALUIN 



419 



Eel River Indians. A part of the Mi- 

 ami, formerly living in Indiana. Their 

 village was at Thorn town, Boone co., 

 where they had a reservation, which was 

 sold in 1828, the band removing to the 

 Miami res. between the Wal)ash and 

 Eel rs., in Miami co. They afterward 

 shared the general fortunes of the tribe. 



(j. M. ) 

 Eel River Indians. — Knox (1792) in Am. St. Papers, 

 I, 2:ib, 183'2. Eelrivers.— Brown, West. Gaz., 72, 

 1S17. Elk river tribe.— Ibid., 349 (misprint). 

 Isle-River Indians.— Imlay, West. Ter., 371, 1793 

 (Eel r., through a corruption of TAnguille into 

 'Long-isle'). I'Anguille. — French name of the 

 band and settlement ('The eel'). Long-isle.'^ — 

 Imlay, op. cit. (misrendering of French I'An- 

 giiille). Thornton party. — tJale, Upper Miss., 178, 

 1867. Thorntown party. — Wyandot Vil. treaty (pro- 

 claimed 1828) in U. S. Ind. Treat., 5'20, 1873. 



Eesteytoch. Given as a tribe on Cas- 

 cade inlet, Brit. Col. ; probably a village 

 group of the Bellacoola. 

 Ees-tey-toch. — Kane, Wand, in N. Am., app.,1859. 



Efaca. A Timucua clan belonging to 

 the Acheha phratry. — Pareja (1612-14) 

 quoted by Gatschet in Proc. Am. Philos. 

 Soc, XVII, 492, 1878. 



Egan. An Algonquian settlement in 

 Maniwaki township, Ottawa co., Quebec, 

 containing 225 Indians in 1884. 



Egedesminde. A missionary station on 

 Davis str., w. Greenland. — Crantz, Hist. 

 Greenland, i, 14, 1767. 



Eguianna-cahel ('water-hole of the 

 mountain'). A rancheria, probably Co- 

 chimi, connected with Purisima (Cade- 

 gomo) mission, Lower California, in the 

 18th century. — Doc. Hist. Mex., 4th s., v, 

 189, 1857. 

 Egusanna cahel. — Ibid. 



Ehartsar. A band of the Crows, one 

 of the four into which Lewis divided the 

 tribe. 



E-hart'-sar.— Lewis, Trav., 175, 1809. Eh-hi- 

 tza. — Long, Exped. Rocky Mts., ii, Ixxxiv, 1823 

 (Hidatsa name: 'leaf people"). 



Ehatisaht. A Nootka tribe on Esper- 

 anza inlet, w. coast of Vancouver id., 

 Brit. Col. ; pop. 101 in 1902, 95 in 1904. 

 Their principal village is Oke. From 

 their waters came the larger part of the 

 supply of dental ium shells extensively 

 used on the Pacific coast as media of 

 exchange. 



Ai-tiz-zarts— Jewitt, Nar., 36, 1849. Aitzarts.— 

 Armstrong, Oregon, 136, 1857. Ayhuttisaht.— 

 Sproat, Sav. Life, 3U8, l,s68. Eh-aht-tis-aht.— fan. 

 Ind. Aff., 52, 1875. Ehateset.— Mavne, Brit. Col., 

 251, 1862. Ehatisaht.— Can. Ind. Aff. 1901, pt. 2, 

 1.58. E'hatisath.— Boas, 6th Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., 

 31,1890. Ehatt-is-aht.— Can. Ind. Aff. 1897, 357. 



Ehouae ('one battered it.' — Hewitt). 

 A village of the Tionontati existing in 

 1640. 



EhSae.— Jes. Rel. 1641, 69, 1858.— Ehwae.— Shea, 

 note in Charlevoix, New France, ii, 153, 1866. 

 Sainct Pierre et sainct Paul. — Jes. Rel. 1640, 95, 

 1858. 



Ehressaronon. The Huron name of a 

 tribe mentioned by Ragueneau in 1640 as 

 living s. of St Lawrence r. (Jes. Rel. 1640, 

 35, 1858). It can not now be identified 



with any tribe s. of the St Lawrence. Per- 

 haps Iroquoian, as are some of the tribes 

 mentioned in the same list. 



Ehutewa. A Luiseno village formerly 

 in the neighborhood of San Luis Rey 

 mission, s. Cal. (Tavlor in Cal. Farmer, 

 May 11, 1860). Possibly the same as 

 Hatawa. 



Eidenu (perhaps an Eskimo rendering 

 of ' I don't know ' ). A Kinugumiut coast 

 settlement at C. Prince of Wales. 

 Ei-dan-noo. — Beechy (1826) quoted bv Baker, 

 Geog. Diet. Alaska, 1901. Iden-noo.— Ibid." "Wales.- 

 Post-route map, 1903. 



Eider (trans, of Igognak, 'eider duck'). 

 An Aleut village on Captain bay, Un- 

 alaska, Alaska, at a point of the same 

 name. Pop. 39 in 1830, according to 

 Veniaminoff. 



Igognak. — Kotzebue(1816) quoted by Baker, Geog. 

 Diet. Alaska, 1901 ('eider duck" ). Igonok. — Coxe, 

 Russ. Discov., 166, 1787. Paystravskoi.— Elliott, 

 Cond. Aff. Alaska, 22.5, 1875. Pestriakof.— Baker, 

 Geog. Diet. Alaska, 1901 (Ru.ssian: 'eider duck'). 

 Pestriakovo. — Sarichef (1792) quoted by Baker, 

 ibid. Pestriakowskoje. — Holmberg,EthnoI.Skizz., 

 map, 18.5.5. Pestryakovskoe. — Veniaminoff, Za- 

 piski, ii,'202,1840. 



'Ein&'ke {E-liV-a-ke, ' catchers,' or 'sol- 

 diers'). A society of the Ikunuhkatsi, or 

 All Comrades, in the Piegan tribe; it has 

 been obsolete since al)out 1860, and per- 

 haps earlier. — Grinnell, Blackfoot Lodge 

 Tales, 221, 1892. 



Eiwhuelit. A division of the Yuit Es- 

 kimo on St Lawrence id., Bering sea. 

 Bogoras says "they are plainly a colony 

 from the nearest [Siberian] shore, prob- 

 ably from Indian point." The villages 

 are Chibukak, Chitnak, Kialegak, Kuku- 

 liak, Puguviliak, and Punuk. 

 Eiwhue'lit.— Bogoras, Chukchee, '20,1904 (Chuk- 

 chi name). Kikhtog'amut.— Dall in Cont. X. A. 

 Ethnol., I, 15, 1877 ('islanders'). Oomoojeks.— 

 Kelly, Arctic E:skimo in Ala.ska, 11,1890. Shi- 

 wo-kug-mut. — Dall in Proc. A. A. A. S., xxxiv, 

 377, 1886. Umudjek.— Woolfe in 11th Census, 

 Alaska, 130, 1893. 



Ekaentoton. The Huron name of Man- 

 itoulin id. and of the Indians (Amikwa) 

 living on it in 1649. It was the ancient 

 home of the Ottawa. 



Ekaentoton.— Jes. Rel. 1649, n, 6, 1858. I'Isle de 

 Saincte Marie. — Ibid. 



Ekaloaping. A Padlimiut Eskimo set- 

 tlement in Padli fjord, Bafhn land. 



Exaloaping.— Boas in 6th Rep. B. A. E., 441, 1888. 



Ekaluakdjuin. A summer settlement 

 of the Saumingmiut sul)tribe of the Oko- 

 miut P^skimo, n. of Cumberland sd. 

 Exaluaqdjuin.— Boas in 6th Rep. B. A. E., 439, 1888. 



Ekalualuin. A summer settlement of 

 the Akndnirmiut Eskimo on Home bay, 

 Baffin land. 

 Exalualuin.— Boas in 6th Rep. B. A. E., 441, 1888. 



Ekaluin. A summer settlement of the 

 Nugumiut Eskimo of Baffin land at the 

 head of Fro])isher l)av. 

 Ekaluin.— Boas in 6th Rep. B. A. E.,map, 1888. 



Ekaluin. A summer settlement of 

 Talirpingmiut Eskimo on the s. shore of 

 Cuml)erland sd. 

 Exoluin.— Boas in 6th Rep. B^. ¥.., map, 1888. 



