BULL. 30] 



HACANAC HAGI 



519 



Consult Boas in Proc. Nat. Mus., xi, 

 1889; Hnllicka in Am. Anthrop., v, 385, 

 1903; VI, 51, 1904; vii, 480, 1905; viii, 39, 

 1906; De Bry, Brevis Narratio, 1591; Har- 

 iot, Virginia, repr. 1874. Dixon in Bull. 

 Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., xvii, pt. 3, 1905; 

 Catlin, INIanners and Customs N. A. 

 Inds., 1841; Goddard, Life and Culture 

 of the Hupa, 1903; Bandelier in various 

 Papers of the Archjieol. Inst. America; 

 Morgan, Houses aud House-life of the 

 American Aborigines, Cont. N. A. Eth- 

 nol., IV, 1881; Willoughby in Am. An- 

 throp., viii. No. 1, 1906;" Holm, Descr. 

 New Sweden, 1834; Schoolcraft, Ind. 

 Tribes, i-vi, 1851-57; Dellenbaugh, North 

 Americans of Yesterday, 1901; Matthews, 

 Navaho Legends, 1897; also, the various 

 reports of the B. A. E. : Boas, Murdoch, 

 Nelson, and Turner for the Eskimo; Dor- 

 sey for the Omaha; C. and V. Mindeleff 

 for the Navaho and Pueblos; Fewkes for 

 the I'ueblos; Hoffman for the Menominee 

 and Chippewa, etc. (c t.) 



Hacanac. Mentioned by the Gentleman 

 of Elvas in 1557 ( Hakluyt Soc. Publ., ix, 

 132, 1851 ) as a province of which Moscoso 

 waa informed in 1542; ajiparently on the 

 N. E. Texan border. Unidentified. 



Hachaath. An extinct Nootka tribe 

 which formerly lived on or n. of Barclay 

 sd., Vancouver id. 



A-y-charts.— Jewitt, Narr., 120, 1849. Aytch-arts. — 

 Ibid., o7, Haca'ath.— Boas, 0th Rep. N. W. Tribes 

 Can., 32, 1890. Hatoa'ath.— Ibid.. 31. 



Hachepiriinu ( ' young dogs') . A former 

 Arikara band under chief Chinanitu, The 

 Brother. 



Hace'-pi-ri-i-nu'. — Hayden, Ethnog. and Philol. 

 Mo. Val., 357. 1S<)2. Young Dogs. — Culbertson in 

 Smiths! m. Rep. 1850, 143, 1851. 



Hachimuk. A former Aleut village on 

 Agattu id., Alaska, one of the Near id. 

 group of the Aleutians, now uninhabited. 



Hachos (prob. Span.: a fagot or bundle 

 of straw or grass covered with resin) . Men- 

 tioned as a wild tribe of New Mexico in 

 the 18th century. — Villa-Sefior, Theatro 

 Am.,pt. 2,412,1748. 



Hackensack {Acl'l'inkas-hachj, 'the 

 stream that unites with another in low- 

 level ground.' — Heckewelder) . A former 

 division of the Unami Delawares, occupy- 

 ing the territory designated by the In- 

 dians Ackkinkashacky, embracing the 

 valleys of Hackensack and Passaic rs. in 

 N. New Jersey. Their principal village 

 was Gamoenapa, usually known as Com- 

 munipaw. They took a prominent part 

 in the events of 1643-44, but subsequently 

 appear as mediators through their chief 

 Oritany (Oratamy, Oratam, etc. ), who en- 

 joyed, to a ripe old age, the confidence of 

 his people and the surrounding chieftain- 

 cies, as well as that of the whites. The 

 lands of the tribe embraced Jersey City, 

 Hoboken, a part of Staten island, Wee- 

 hawken, Newark, Passaic, etc. Their 



number was estimated at 1,000 in 1643, of 

 which 300 were warriors, probably an ex- 

 aggeration (Ruttenber). (.J. M. c. T. ) 

 Achkingkesacky. — Doc. of 16ti3 in X. Y. Doc. Col. 

 Hist., XIII, 276, 1881. Achkinkehacky.— Treaty of 

 lt;4.=i, ibid., 18. Achkinkes hacky.— Doc. of 1643, 

 il)id., 14. Ackinckesaky.— Due. of 1663, ibid., 280. 

 Hacansacke.— Ddc. of 1662, ibid., xiv, 512, 1883. 

 Haecinsack.— Doe. ra. 1643, ibid., I, 198, 1856. 

 Hachinghsack.— Deedof 1657, ibid, XIV, 394, 1883. 

 Haehkinkeshaky. — Doc. of 16.55, Ibid., Xlll, 55.1881. 

 Hackensack.— Treaty of 1673, ibid., 476. Hack- 

 inckesaky.— Stuvvesant (1663), ibid., 323. Hack- 

 inghesaky.— Doc. of 1662, ibid., 218. Haok- 

 inghsack. — Deed of 1657, ibid., xiv, 393, 1883. 

 Hackinghsackin. — Doc. of 1660, ibid., 182. Eack- 

 inghsakij.— Doc. of 1663, ibid., xin, 305, 1881. 

 Haekingkesacky. — Doc. of 1663, ibid., 294. Hack- 

 ingkescaky.— Doe. of 1663, ibid., 289. Haek- 

 ingsack.— Report of 1644, ibid., 1,150,1856. Hack- 

 inkasacky.— Treaty of 1660, ibid., xill, 148, 1881. 

 Hackinkesackinghs,— Doc. of 1600, ibid., 183. 

 Hackinkesacky. — Doe. of 1663, ibid., 294. Hack- 

 inkesaky. — Ibid. Hackinsack. — Doc. ca. 1643, 

 ibid., 1,199,1856. Hackinsagh.— Doc. of 1673. ibid., 

 II. 606, 18.58. Hackquinsack.— Doc. of 1650, ibid., 

 I, 411, 1856. Hacquinsack, — Ibid. 



Haddo. See Jlnddoh. 



Hadlej' Indians. A small body or l)and, 

 possil)ly Nipmuc, which, at the time of 

 King Philip's war in 1675, occupied a 

 small fort about a mile above Hatfield, 

 on the w. side of Connecticut r., in 

 Hampshire co.J Mass. They abandoned 

 their village to join Philip's forces and 

 thereafter ceased to be known under the 

 name above given. (,i. m. ) 



Hadsapoke's Band (from the name of its 

 chief, " Horse-stopjier" ). A Paviotso 

 band formerly at Gold canyon, Carson 

 r., w. Nev., said to number 110 in 1859. 

 Had-sa-poke's band. — Dodge in Ind. Aff. Rep. 1859, 

 373, 1860. 



Hadtuitazhi ('touches no green corn 

 husks ' ) . A former subgens of the Hanga 

 gens of the Omaha. 

 Ha-;u-it'aji.— Dorsev in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 227, 



1897. 



Haena. A former Haida town on the 

 E. end of Maude id., Skidegate inlet, 

 Queen Charlotte ids. , Brit. Col. It is said 

 to have been occupied in very early times 

 by the Djahui-skwahladagai, and in re- 

 cent years it was reoccui)ied by the west 

 coast Haida, who desired to be nearer the 

 traders, but after a comparatively short 

 occupancy the people moved to Skidegate 

 about 1880. There are said to have l)een 

 13 houses, which would indicate a popu- 

 lation of about 150. (.1. R. s. ) 

 Khina Haade, — Harri.'ion in Proc. and Trans. Roy. 

 Soc. Can., sec. li. 125. 1895 (Khina = Haena). 

 New Gold Harbour Village. — Dawson, Queen Char- 

 lotte Ids., 168b, 18,so. Xa'ina.— Swanton, Cont. 

 Haida, 279, 1905. 



Haeser. A former tribe near the lower 

 Rio Grande, living with the Gueiquesales, 

 ManosPrietas, Bocores, Pinanaca, Escaba, 

 Cacastes, CocobiiJta, Cocomaque, Codame, 

 Contotores, Colorados, Babiam'ares, and 

 Taimamares. Probably Coahuiltecan. 

 Siaexer. — Fernando del Bosque (1675) in Nat. 

 Geog. Mag., xiv, 340, 1903. Xaeser.— Ibid., 344. 



Hagi {Xd^gt, said to mean 'striped'). 

 A Haida town on or near the largest of the 



