UULL. 301 



KEWIGOSHKEEM — KHABENAPO 



677 



siou of the Okinagaii that Hved 30 in. 

 above Priests rapids, on Cokimbia r., 

 AVash. 



Ke-waught-chen-unaughs. — Ross, Adventures, 290. 

 l)S-li). Ke-waugh-tohen-emachs. — Ibid.. 137. 



Kewigoshkeem. A former C'liippewa or 

 Ottawa village, named after a chief who 

 flourished in the latter part of the 18th 

 century; situated on Grand r., at or near 

 the present Grand Rapids, IMich., on 

 land ceded to the United states by the 

 treaty of Chicago, Aug. 29, 1S21, pro- 

 claimed Mar. 25, 1832. Under this treaty 

 half a section of land near the village was 

 granted to Charles and Medart Beaubien, 

 sons of ]\Iannabenaqua. 



Ke-wi-go shkeem. — Treaty (proelaimed 1S32) in 

 U. S. Iiid. Treat., 154, 1873. Ke-wi-gosh-kum.— 

 Royce in 18th Rep. B. A. E., Mich, map, 1899. 

 Kewigushkum.— Bennett (1779) in Mieh. Pion. 

 Coll., IX, 393, 1886 (the chief). 



Keya. The Badger clan of the Tewa 

 pueblos of San Juan, Santa Clara, and 

 San Ildefonso, N. Mex.— Hodge in Am. 

 Anthrop., ix, 349, 1896. 



Keyatiwankwi {K'eyatkvanktri, 'place 

 of upturning or elevation'). The first of 

 the mythic settling places of the Zuni 

 after their emergence from the under- 

 world.— Cushing in 13th Rep. B. A. E., 

 388, 1896. 



Keyauwee. A small tribe formerly liv- 

 ing in North Carolina, affiliated with the 

 Tutelo, Saponi, and Occaneechi. Nothing 

 remains of their language, but they per- 

 haps belonged to the Siouan family, from 

 the fact of their intimate association with 

 well known Siouan tribes of tlie E. In 

 1701 Lawson (Carolina, 1714, 87-89, repr. 

 1860) found them in a palisaded village 

 about 30 m. n. e. of Yadkin r., near the 

 present High point, Guilford co., N. C. 

 Around the village were large fields of 

 corn. At that time they were about 

 equal in number to the Saponi and had, 

 as chief, Keyauwee Jack, who was by Itirth 

 a Congaree, but had oljtained the chief- 

 taincy by marriage with their "queen." 

 Lawson says most of the men wore mus- 

 taches or whiskers, an unusual custom 

 for Indians. At the time of this travel- 

 er's visit the Keyauwee were on the 

 point of joining the Tutelo and Saponi for 

 better ]»rotection against their enemies. 

 Shortly afterward they, together with 

 the Tutelo, Saponi, Occaneechi, and Sha- 

 kori, moved down toward the settlements 

 about Albemarle sd., the five tribes 

 with one or two others not named num- 

 bering then only about 750 souls. In 

 1716 Gov. Spotswood of Virginia pro- 

 posed to settle the Keyauwee with the 

 Eno and Sara at Enotown on the frontier 

 of North Carolina, but was prevented 

 by the opposition of that colony. They 

 moved southward with the Sara, and per- 

 haps also the Eno, to Pedee r. , S. C. , some 

 time in 1733. On Jefferys' map of 1761 

 their village is marked on the Pedee 

 above that of the Sara, about the boun- 



dary between the two Carolinas. With 

 this notice they disappear from history, 

 having proba])ly been absorbed by the 

 Catawba. (j. m.) 



Keawe.— Jefferys, Fr. Dom. Am.. 1,134, map, 1761. 

 Keawee. — Bowen, map of the Brit. Am. Planta- 

 tions, 1760. Keeawawes. — Doc. of 1716 in N. C. 

 Rec, 242. 1886. Keeowaws.— Ibid., 243. Keeowee.— 

 Vaugondy, maji Partie de I'Amer. Sept., 1755. 

 Keiauwees. — Lawson (1701), Carolina, 384, 1860. 

 Keomee. — Moll, map of Car., 1720 (mi.sprint). 

 Kewawees.— Byrd (1733), Hist. Div. Line, ii, 22, 

 1866. Keyauwee. — Lawson (1701), Carolina, 87, 

 repr. 1860. Keyawees.— Briekell, Nat. Hi.st. N. 

 Car., 343, 1737. 



Keyerhwotket Cold village'). A vil- 

 lage of the Ilwotsotenne on Bulkley r., 

 Brit. Col., lat. 55°. 



Keyar-hwotqat. — Morice, Notes on W. Den6s, 27, 

 1902. '^eyaahwotqat.— Morice in Trans. Roy. Soc. 

 Can., X, map, 1892. Kyahuntgate.— Tolmie and 

 Dawson, Vocab.s. B. C, map, issi. Kyahwilgate.— 

 Dawson in Rep.Geol.Surv. Can.,20B, ISSI. 



Keynkee. A former Cherokee town; 

 locality undetermined. — Doc. of 1799 

 quoted by Royce in 5th Rep. B. A. E., 

 144, 1887. 



Kezche. A Tatshiautin village on Tache 

 r., Brit. Col., under the Babine and 

 I'pper Skeena River agencv; pop. 24 in 

 1904. 



Grand Rapids.— Can. Ind. AfF., pt. 2, 70, 1902. 

 'Keztce^— Morice, Notes on W. Denes, 26, 1902. 

 Kus-che-o-tin. — Dawson in Rep. Can. Geol. Surv., 

 30b, 1881. Kustsheotin. — Tolmie and Dawson, 

 Vocabs. B. C, TiSR, is.si. 



Keze ('barl)ed like a fishhook,' a deris- 

 ive name, alluding to their cross disposi- 

 tion). A band of the Sisseton Sioux, an 

 offshoot of the Kakhmiatonwan. — Dor- 

 sey in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 217, 1897. 



Kezonlathut. A Takulli village on Mc- 

 Leod lake, Brit. Col. ; pop. 96 in 1904. 

 McLejad'sLake.— Can.Ind. AfF., 1904, pt. n,74,1905. 

 ftezonlathut. — Moriee in Trans. Roy. Soc. Can., x, 

 109, 1892. 



Kfwetragottine ('mountain people'). 

 A division of the Kawchodinne living s. 

 of Ft Good Hope, along ]\Iackenzie r., 

 Mackenzie Ter., Can. 



Kfwe-tpa-Gottine. — Petitot, Autour du lac des Es- 



claves, 362, 1891. 



Khaamotene. Given, seemingly in error, 

 as a subdivision of the Tolowa formerly 

 dwelling at the mouth of Smith r., Cal., 

 in the village of Khoonkhwuttunne, and 

 at theforks inavillagecalledKhosatunne. 

 Qa'-a-mo' te'-ne. — Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, 

 III, 236, 1890. Smith River Indians.— Ibid. 



Khaap. A l)ody of Ntlakyapamuk un- 

 der the Kamloops-r)kana£ran agencv, Brit. 

 Col.; pop. 23 in 1901, the last time the 

 name appears. 



Khaap.— Can. Ind. Aff. 1901, pt. 2, 166. Skaap.— 

 Ibid., 1885. 196. 



Khabemadolil. A Pomo village on up- 

 per Clear lake, Cal. — Kroeber, MS., Univ. 

 Cal., 1903. 



Khabenapo C 'stone village', or 'stone peo- 

 ple ' ). A Pomo division or band on Kel- 

 sey cr., in Big valley, on the w. side of 

 Clear lake, Cal. Thev numbered 195 in 

 1851. 



Ca-ba-na-po.— McKee (1851) in Sen. Ex. Doc. 4, 

 32d Cong., spec, sess., 136, 18.53. Habe-napo. — 

 Gibb-s (1851) in Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, ill, 109, 



