BULL. 30] 



HATHLETUKHISH HAVASUPAl 



537 



Absentee Shawnee, from having been 

 absent from the more recent treaties 

 made with the rest of the tribe. The 

 Hathawekela claim to be the "elder 

 brothers" among the Shawnee, as being 

 the first created of the tribe. The band 

 formerly under Black Bob (q. v.) are a 

 portion of this division. See Halbert and 

 Shawnee in Gulf States Hist. Mag., i, no. 

 6,413-418,1903. (j. m.) 



Asseekales.— Cartlidge (1731) in Pa. Archives, i, 

 305, 1852. Assekelaes. — Gordon (1731) quoted by 

 Brinton, Lenape Legends. 32, 1SS5. Assiwikales. — 

 Brinton, ibid. Asswekales. — Jiavenpcirt (1731) in 

 Pa. Archives, l, 299, lS.n2. Asswikales. — Gov. I'a. 

 (1731), ibid., 302. Asswikalus.— Le Tort (1731 i, 

 ibid., 300. Elder Brothers.— W. H. Shawnee, oji. 

 cit., 417. Ha-tha-we-ke-lah.— Ibid., 415. Ha-tha- 

 we-ki-lah. — Ibid., 417. 



Hathletukhish {HagV-t'-Ci-qtc^). A for- 

 mer Yaquina village on the s. side of Ya- 

 quina r., Oreg. — Dorsey in Jour. Am. 

 Folk-lore, in, 229, 1890. 



Hatsi. The extinct Earth clans of 

 Laguna and San Felipe pueblos, N. Mex. 

 The Earth clan of Laguna claimed to have 

 come originally from Jemez and to have 

 formed a phratry with the Meyo ( Lizard ) , 

 Skurshka (Water-snake), and Shruhwi 

 (Rattlesnake) clans. (f. w. h. ) 



Haatsii-hano.— Hodge in Am. Anthrop., ix, 350. 

 1896 (San Felipe form: hdno = 'people'). Hatsi- 

 hano<^h — Ibid. (Laguna form). 



Hatsinawan (hawe 'leaves', tsinaur 

 'marks,' 'paintings', tran 'place of : 

 'town of the (fossil?) leaf-marks.' — Clash- 

 ing). A ruined pueblo formerly inhal> 

 ited by the Zufii, situated n. n. w. of 

 Hawikuh and s. w. of the present Zuni 

 pueblo, N. jMex. — Gushing, infn, 1891. 

 Hatschi-na-wha. — Fewkes in Jour. Am. Ethnol. 

 and Archseol., I, 101, 1891 (probably identical). 



Hatteras. An Algonquian tril)e living 

 in 1701 on the sand banks about C. Hat- 

 teras, N. G., E. of Pamlico sound, and 

 frequenting Roanoke id. Their single 

 village, Sandbanks, had then only a))0ut 

 80 inhabitants. They sliowed traces of 

 white blood and claimed tbat some of 

 their ancestors were white. They may 

 have been identical with the Groatan 

 Indians (q. v.), with whom Raleigh's 

 colonists at Roanoke id. are supposed to 

 have taken refuge. . (.r. m. ) 



Hatarask.-Lane (l586) in Smith (1629), Virginia, 

 I, 92, 1819 (place name). Hatorask. — Ibid. Hat- 

 teras Indians. — Law.son (1714), Carolina, 108, 1860. 



Hauenayo. A clan of the Apohola 

 phratry of the ancient Timucua of Flor- 

 ida.^Pareja {ca. 1614) quoted by Gat- 

 schet in Am. Philos. Soc. Proc, xvii, 

 492, 1878. 



Haukoma. A Porno division or band 

 on the w. side of Glear lake. Gal., num- 

 bering 40 in 1851. 



How-ku-ma. — Gibbs (18.51) in Schoolcraft, Ind. 

 Tribes, in, 109,1853. How-ru-ma.—McKee (18.51) 

 in Sen. Ex. Doc. 4, 32d Cong., .sp)ec. se.ss., 136, 1853. 



Hauwiyat {Hau-u'i-yat'). A former 

 Siuslaw village on or near Siuslaw r., 

 Oreg. — Dorsev in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, 

 III, 230, 1890/ 



Hauzaurni. A foriner Gostanoan vil- 

 lage near Santa Gruz mission, Gal.— 

 Taylor in Gal. Farmer, Apr. 5, 1860. 



Havasupai( 'blueor green waterpeople' ). 

 A small isolated trilu'of the Yuman stock 



HAVASUPAl MAN. (aM. MUS. NAT. HIST. ^ 



(the nucleus of which is believed to have 

 descended from the Walapai) who occupy 

 Gataract canvon of the Rio Colorado in n. 



HAVASUPAf WOMAN. 



w. Arizona. Whipple (Pac. R. R. Rep., 

 Ill, pt. I, 82, 1856) was informed in 1850 

 that the "Cosninos" roamed from the 



