530 



HAMTSIT HANGATANGA 



[b. a. k. 



Normal courses are given in business, 

 agriculture, and the trades, as well as in 

 kin<lergarten and public school teaching. 

 Agriculture begins in the primary depart- 

 ment of the training school, and becomes 

 so important a branch of the academic 

 work that at the end of the course the 

 student is prepared to conduct intelligent 

 farming. In addition to the model farm, 

 dairy, orchards, poultry yards, and expe- 

 riment garden, the school has a dairy and 

 stock farm of 600 acres a few miles away. 

 The trades taught the ])oys are carpentry, 

 wood turning, Vjricklaying, plastering, 

 painting, wheelwrighting, blacksmithing, 

 machine work, steam fitting, tailoring, 

 shoe and harness making, tinsmithing, 

 upholstering, and printing. A large and 

 well equipped trade school, with mechan- 

 ical-drawing room, offers excellent facil- 

 ities for the practical instruction given. 

 The domestic-science building and the 

 school kitchens and laundries give oppor- 

 tunity for instruction in all kinds of do- 

 mestic work, and each girl is recjuired to 

 complete a practical course in every 

 branch of housekeeping, cooking, dairy- 

 ing, and gardening. 



The school has about 60 buildings for 

 housing and educating its 900 boarding 

 students. These include a church, li- 

 brary, dormitories, recitation halls, trade 

 school, domestic science and agricultural 

 building, hospital, printing otRce, green- 

 houses, barn, workshops, laundry, offices, 

 and dwellings for theofficers and teachers. 

 AH the young men receive instruction in 

 military tactics, which has proved of great 

 value in instilling hal)its of promptness, 

 neatness, and obedience. 



The Government pays SI 67 a year for 

 each of its 120 Indian pupils; all expenses 

 in excess of this must be provided by 

 philanthropic friends. The Indians and 

 colored students have separate dormitory 

 buildings, and the pupils of the two races 

 also occupy separate tables in the dining 

 rooms, but work together in classes and 

 shops with mutual good feeling and help- 

 fulness. 



The record of Indians returned to their 

 homes is carefully kept. For the year 

 ending in May, 1906, there were 183 doing 

 an excellent grade of work as teachers in 

 schoolroom, shop, or on farms; as doctors, 

 lawyers, or ethnologists; 306 were living 

 civilized lives, setting examples of indus- 

 try and temperance; 80 w^ere doing fairly 

 well under hard conditions; 28 were doing 

 poorly, and 4 were bad. This gives so 

 large a proportion of satisfactory results 

 that Hampton considers her work for 

 Indians in every way a success. 



The school publishes a monthly maga- 

 zine called The SouOiern Workman, de- 

 voted to the interests of the negro and 

 the Indian. The Indians publish a small 

 paper, Talks and Thouglds, now in its nine- 



teenth year; all its contributors are In- 

 dians, and many of the articles are valu- 

 able additions to Indian literature and 

 ethnology. (c. M. f. ) 



'S.a.mX,sit{IIamts'tt, 'having food', named 

 from an ancestor). A Bellacobla division 

 at Talio, Brit. Col. — Boas in 7th Rep. N. 

 W. Tribes Can., 3, 1891. 



Han. An mii<lentilied trilje living on a 

 part of the island of Malhado (Galveston 

 id.?), Texas, on which Cabeza de Vaca 

 suffered shipwreck in 1528. The language 

 of the Han differed from that of their 

 neighbors, the Capoque (probably Coa- 

 que), but they had customs in common. 

 They possibly formed the westernmost 

 band of the Attacapa. See Cabeza de 

 Vaca, Narr., Smith trans., 82, 1871; Gat- 

 schet, Karankawa Inds., 34, 1891. 



Han ( ' night ' ) . A Kansa gens. Its sub- 

 gentes are Hannikashingaand Dakanman- 

 yin. 

 Ha". — Dorsey in Am. Nat., 671, 1885. 



Hana ( ' dog ' ) . A subpiratry or gens of 

 the Menominee. — Hoffman in 14th Rep. 

 B. A. E.,pt. 1,42, 1896. 



Hanahawunena ('rock men.' — Kroe- 

 ber). A division of the Northern Arap- 

 aho, now practically extinct. 

 Aanu'hawa.— Mooiiey ill 14th Rep^ B. A. E^. 956, 

 1896. Ha'nahawunena. — Ibid. Ha"anaxaw<iune'- 

 na". — Krot'ber in Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., 

 XVIII, pt. 1. 6, 1902. 



Hanakwa. A former pueblo of the 

 Jemez in New Mexico, tlie exact site of 

 which is not known. 



Ham-a-qua.— Banrlelier in Arch. Inst. Papers, iv, 

 207, 1892. Han-a-kwa.— Hodge, field notes, B. A. E., 

 1.S95. 



Hanaya. A former Chumashan village 

 in Mission canyon, near Santa Barl)ara 

 mission, Cal. 



Ha'-na-ya. — Henshaw, Santa Barbara MS. voeab., 

 B. A. E., 1884. Janaya.— Taylor in Cal. Farmer, 

 Apr. 24, l,s63. 



Hanehewedl (XanEXEwei^, 'stone by or 

 near the trail' ). A village of the Nicola 

 bandof theNtlakyapamuk, nearNicolar., 

 27 m. above Spences Bridge, Brit. Col. — 

 Teit in Mem. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist, ii, 174, 

 1900. 



Hanga ( 'leader'). A gens of the Han- 

 gasht'uu division of the Omaha. 

 Foremost.— Dorsev in Bull. Philos. Soe. Wash., 129, 

 isso. Hanga.— Dorsey in 3d Rep. B. A. E., 233, 

 1884. Hunga.— Morgan, Anc.Soc, 155, 1877. Hun- 

 guh.— Long, Exped. Rockv Mts., 1, 327, 1823. Large 

 Hanga.— Dorsey in Am. Nat., 674, 1885. Medi- 

 cine. — Morgan, op. cit., 155. 



Hangashenu ( ' young men of the lead- 

 ers.' — Fletcher). One of the two divi- 

 sions of the Omaha, composed of the 

 "Wezhinshte, Inkesabe, Hanga, Dhatada, 

 and Kanze gentes. 



Hangacenu.— Dorsey in 3d Rep. B. A. E., 219, 

 18.S4; 15th Rep. B. A. E., 226, 1897. Hongashan.— 

 .lackson (1877) quoted by Donaldson in Smithson. 

 Rep., 1885, pt. 2, 74, 1886. Hon-ga-sha-no.— Long, 

 E.xped. Rocky Mts., l, 325, 1823. 



Hangatanga ( ' large Hanga ' ) . A Kansa 

 gens. 



Black eagle.— Morgan, Anc. Soc, 1.56, 1877. Da- 

 sin'-ja-ha-ga. — Ibid. (' Deertail ). Hanga tanga. — 

 Dorsey in 1.5th Rep. B. A. E., 231, 1897. Hanga 



