556 



HOGOLOGES — HOLECLAME 



[b. a. e. 



CO., Ohio. The Indians sold their reser- 

 vation there in 1831 and removed w. of 

 the Mississippi. (.i. m.) 



Hogologes. A former Creek town on 

 Apalachic'ola r., at the junction of Chat- 

 tahoochee and Flint rs., in Georgia. 

 Hagaligis. — Bartram, Voy., I, map, 1799. Ho- 

 gohegees. — Jeffery.s, Am. Atlas, map 8, 1776. Hogo- 

 leeges. — Romans, Fla., i, 280. 177.S. Hogoleegis. — 

 Roberts, Fla., 13, 90, 1763. Hogoligis.— Alcedo, 

 Die. Geog., II, 364, 1787. Hogologes.— Jefferys, Am. 

 Atlas, map 5, 1776. Ogolegees.— Lattr6, Map U. S., 

 1784. 



Hogstown. Described as an old (Del- 

 aware) village between Venango and Buf- 

 falo cr., Pa., in 1791 (Proctor in Am. St. 

 Papers, Ind. Aff., i, 153, 1832). Perhaps 

 wrongly located and identical with Kus- 

 kuski. 



Hoh. A band of the Quileute living 

 at the mouth of Hoh r., about 15 m. 

 s. of Lapush, the main seat of the tribe 

 on the w. coast of Washington. They 

 are under the jurisdiction of the Neah 

 Bay agency. Pop. 62 in 1905. (l. p.) 

 Hohs,— McKennev in Ind. Aff. Rep. 1869, 131, 1870. 

 Holes.— Hill, ibid., 1867, 48, 1868. Hooch.— Swan, 

 N. W. Coast, 211, 1857. Hooh.— Ibid. Huch.— 

 Gibbs in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., I, 173, 1877. Kwaak- 

 sat. — Ibid. 



Hohandika ('earth eaters'). A Sho- 

 shoni division inhabiting the region w. 

 of Great Salt lake, Utah. They suffered 

 a severe defeat in 1862 at the hands of 

 California volunteers. 



Diggers.— Gatschet in Geog. Surv. W. 100 M., 409, 

 1879. Earth Eaters.— Hoffman in Proc. Am. Philos. 

 Soc, XXIII, 298, 1886. Hohandika.— Ibid. Ho- 

 kan-dik'-ah.— Stuart, Montana, 81, 1865. Hokan- 

 ti'kara. — Gatschet, op. clt. Salt Lake Diggers.— 

 Stuart, op. cit. 



Hohe (' Assiniboin'). A band of the 

 Sihasapa division of the Teton Sioux. — 

 Dorsey in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 219, 1897. 



Hohilpo. Said by Lewis and Clark 

 (Exped., I, map, 1814; ii, 596, 1817) to be 

 a tribe of the Tushepaw (q. v. ) residing 

 on Clarke r., above the Micksucksealton, 

 in the Rocky mts., and numbering 300 in 

 25 lodges in 1805. 



Ho hill pos.— Ong. Jour. Lewis and Clark, vi, 114, 

 1905. Ho-hil-pos.— Ibid., 120. Ho-pil-po.— Lewis 

 and Clark misquoted by Gibbs in Pac. R. R. Rep., 

 I, 417, 18.55. 



Hohio. Mentioned by Coxe (Carolana, 

 12, 1 741 )as a nation living on the Wabash. 

 Unidentified, and probably imaginary as 

 a tribe, although the name is the same as 

 Ohio. 



Hohopa (Ho-ho-pa). A Koeksotenok 

 village on the w. coast of Baker id., Brit. 

 Col. — Dawson in Trans. Roy. Soc. Can., 

 sec. 2, 73, 1887. 



Hohota. Mentioned by Onate (Doc. 

 Ined.r XVI, 113, 1871) as a pueblo of New 

 Mexico in 1598; at that time doubtless 

 situated in the country of the Salinas, in 

 the vicinity of Abo, e. of the Rio Grande, 

 and evidently occupied by the Tigua or 

 the Piros. (p. w. h.) 



Hoindarhonon ('island people.' — Hew- 

 itt). The Huron name of a tribe subor- 



dinate to the Ottawa. — Sagard (1632), 

 Canada, iv, cap. 'Nations,' 1866. 



Hoitda. A division of the Maidu living 

 on Rocker., in the N. part of Butte co.,Cal. 

 Hocktem.— Chever in Bull. Essex Inst., ii, 28, 1871. 

 Hoitda,— Curtin, MS. vocab., B. A.E., 188.5. 



Hokarutcha ('skunk'). A band or so- 

 ciety of the Crows. 



Ho-ka-rut'-cha.— Morgan, Anc. Soc, 159, 1877. 

 Pole-cat band.— Culbertson in Smlthson. Rep. 

 1850, 144, 18.51. 



Hokedi ( Xoq.'e^di, ' people of X5q ! ' ) . A 

 Tlingit clan at Wrangell, Alaska, belong- 

 ing to the Wolf phratry. They are named 

 from a place (Xoq!) opposite Old Wran- 

 gell. 



Kook-a-tee. — Kane, Wand, in N. A., app., 1859. 

 aoke'de.— Boas, 6th Rep. N. W. Tribes of Can., 25, 

 1889. Rchuch-e'di.— Krause, Tlinkit Ind., 120, 

 1885. Xoqle'di.-Swanton, field notes, B. A. E., 1904. 



Hoko. A Clallam village on Okeho r., 

 Wash. Under the name Okeno its in- 

 habitants participated in the treaty of 

 Point No Point, Wash., in 1855. 

 Hoko.— Swan, letter, B. A. E., Feb. 1886. Ocha.— 

 Gibbs in Pac. R. R. Rep., i, 429, 18.55. Ocho.— 

 Stevens in Ind. Aff. Rep., 450, 1854. Okeho.— Ibid. 

 Okeno.— U. S. Ind. Treat. (18.56), 800, 1873. 



Hoko. The Juniper clan of the Kokop 

 (Wood) phratry of the Hopi. 

 Hohu,— Voth, Hopi Proper Names, 78, 1905. Hoko 

 wiiiwu.— Fewkes in 19th Rep. B. A. E., 584, 1900 

 (winuyu='c\A\i'). Ho'-ko wuii-vm. — Fewkes in 

 Am. Anthrop., Vll, 404, 1894. 



Hokokwito. A former village of the 

 Awani division of the Miwok, opposite 

 Yosemite falls, in Yosemite valley, Mari- 

 posa CO., Cal. The hotel now occupies 

 its site. 



Hococwedoc— Powers in Overland Mo., x, 333, 

 1874. Hok-ok'-wi-dok.— Powers in Cont. N. A. 

 Ethnol., Ill, 365, 1877. Hokokwito,— A. L. Kroe- 

 ber, inf'n, 1905. 



Hokomo. A former Maidu village on 

 the E. side of Middle fork of Feather r., 

 almost due n. of Mooretown, Butte co., 

 Cal.— Dixon in Bull. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., 

 XVII, pi. xxxviii, 1905. 



Hok waits {Ho-kwails). A band of Pai- 

 ute formerly living near Ivanpah, s. e. 

 Cal. (Powell in Ind. Aff. Rep. 1873, 51, 

 1874). Cf. Hakiviche, the Mohave name 

 of the Kawia, q. v. 



Holatamico, popularly known as Billy 

 Bowlegs. The last Seminole chief of 

 prominence to leave Florida and remove 

 with his people to the W. He was born 

 about 1808, and after the first Seminole 

 removal became the recognized chief of 

 the remnant in 1842, and was the leader 

 of hostilities in 1855 to 1858. Although 

 but 25 years of age, and not then a chief, 

 he was one of the signers of the treaty of 

 Payne's Landing, May 9, 1832, by which 

 the Seminole agreed to remove to Indian 

 Ter., but it was not until May, 1858, that 

 he and his band, numbering 164 persons, 

 departed. See Bowlegs. (c t. ) 



Holeclame. One of several tribes for- 

 merly occupy mg "the country from 

 Bueiia Vista and Carises lakes, and Kern 

 r. to the Sierra Nevada and Coast range," 



