BULL. 30] 



LOGSTOWN LONE WOLF 



773 



Consult Doddridge, Settlement and In- 

 dian Wars, 1821; Howe, Hist. Coll. Ohio, 

 II, 402, 1896; Jacob, Sketch of Cresap, 

 1866; Jefferson, Notes on Va., 1802, 1804; 

 Kercheval, Hist, of the Valley of Va., 

 1833; Loudon, Narratives, ii, 1811; May- 

 er, Tah-^ah-jute or Logan, 1867; Steven- 

 son in W. Va. Hist. Mag., iii, 144, 1903. 



Logstown. An important village for- 

 merly on the right bank of Ohio r., about 

 14 m. belo\v Pittsburg, in Allegheny co.. 

 Pa. It was originalh' settled by Shawnee 

 and Delawares prior to 1748, and in the 

 following year was reported by Celoron 

 to contain 40 cabins occupied by Iroquois, 

 Shawnee, "Loups" (Delaware, Munsee, 

 and Mahican), as well as Iroquois from 

 Sault St Louis and Lake of Two JNIoun- 

 tains, with some Nipissing, Abnaki, and 

 Ottawa. Father Bonnecamps, of the 

 same expedition, estimated the numljer 

 of cabins at 80, and says "we called it 

 Chiningue, from its vicinity to a river of 

 that name" (Mag. Am. Hist., ii, 142, 

 1878) ; but it should not be confounded 

 with the Shenango some distance n., on 

 Beaver cr. Croghan in 1765 (Thwaites, 

 Early West. Trav., i, 127, 1904) speaks of 

 Logstown as an old settlement of the 

 Shawnee. It was abandoned al)Out 1750 

 and reoccupied by a mixed population of 

 Mingo (chiefly Seneca), Mahican, Otta- 

 wa, and others in the English interest. 

 About this time a new village was built 

 with the aid of the French on a hill over- 

 looking the old site. Logstown was an 

 important trading rendezvous, one of 

 Croghan' s trading houses being estab- 

 lished there; it was also the home of 

 Half-King (Scruniyatha or Monakatua- 

 tha) in 1753-54 (although it is stated that 

 his dwelling was situated a few miles 

 away) , and was a customary stopping 

 place of colonial officers and emissa- 

 ries, as Weiser, Gist, Croghan, Celoron, 

 and Washington, the latter remaining 

 here five days while on his way to Ve- 

 nango and Le Boeuf in 1753, and again 

 making it a resting place while on his 

 Avay to Kanawha r. in 1770. Logstown 

 was also the scene of the treaty between 

 the Virginia commissioners and the In- 

 dians of this section in 1752. According 

 to the author of Western Navigation ( 76, 

 1814), and Cuming (Western Tour, 80, 

 1810), there was also a settlement known 

 as Logstown on the opposite side of the 

 Ohio. It was abandoned by the Indians 

 in 1758, immediately after the capture of 

 Ft Du Quesne. In addition to the au- 

 thorities cited, see Darlington, Christo- 

 pher Gist's Journals, 1893; Pa. Col. Rec, 

 V, 348 et seq., 1851. (c t.) 



Chiningue. — Cijloron (1749) in ^fag. .4m. Hist., n, 

 U3, 1878. Chinnigne.— Thwaite.s, Early West. 

 Trav., I, 24, note, 1904. Lockstown. — Narr. of Ma- 

 rie Le i;ov and Barbara Leininger (1759) transl. in 

 Pa. Mag. Hist, and Biog.. xxix,no. 116,412, 1905. 

 Loggs Town.— Dinwiddie Papers (1751), I, tJ, 1883. 



Logg's-To-wn,— Hamilton (1749) in N Y. Doc. Col. 

 Hi.st., VI, 531,1855. Loggs-town. — Bouquet (1764), 

 Exped., 45, 186S. logs Town.— Croghan (1748) in 

 N. Y. Doc. Col. Hist., Vll, 267,1856. log's Town. — 

 French officer (1749), ibid., IV, 533, 1855. Shenan- 

 go. — Thwaites, op. cit. 



Lohastahni {Lo-hds-tdh'-ni). A former 

 Chumashan village in Ventura co., Cal. 

 — Henshaw, Buenaventura MS. vocab., 

 B. A. E., 1884. 



Lohim. A small Shoshonean band liv- 

 ing on Willow or., a s. atfiuent of the 

 Columbia, in s. Oregon, and proljably 

 belonging to the Mono-Paviotso group. 

 They have never made a treaty with the 

 Government and are generally spoken of 

 as renegades l>elonging to the Umatilla 

 res. (Mooney). In 187Q their number 

 was reported as 114, but the name has 

 not appeared in recent official reports. 

 Ross mistook tliem for Nez Perces. 

 lohim.— Moonev in ]4th Rep. B. A. E., 743, 1896. 

 low-him.— Ross, Fur Hunters, l, 186, 1855. Willow 

 Creek Indians. — Mooney, op cit. 



Lojos. A former Chumashan village in 

 Ventura CO., Cal. — Taylor in Cal. Farmer, 

 July 24, 1863. 



Loka ( ' reeds ' [ phrugnt ites} ) . A Navaho 

 elan. 



Ibka. — Matthews in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, in, 104, 

 1890. Ibka^ine. — Ibid. (f'»u'= 'people'), loka- 

 c/ine'. — Matthews, Navaho Legends, 31, 1897(dme= 

 •peopled. 



Loko. A tribe, probably Paviotso, for- 

 merlv living on or near Carson r., w. Nev. — 

 Holeman in Ind. Aff. Rep., 152, 1852. 



Loksachumpa. A former Seminole town 

 at the head of St Johns r. , Fla. Lokpoka 

 Takoosa Hajo was chief in 1823.— H. R. 

 Ex. Doc. 74 (1823), 19th Cong., 1st sess., 

 27, 1826. 



Lolanko (the Sinkine name of Bull Cr. ). 

 A part of the Sinkine dwelling on Bull 

 and Salmon crs., tributaries of the s. fork 

 of Eel r., Humboldt co., Cal. 

 Flonk'-o.— Powers in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., in, 113, 

 1877 (so called by whites), loloncooks. — Bancroft, 

 Nat. Races, i, 447, 1874. lo-lon'-kiik. — Powers, op. 

 cit. loolanko. — A.L.Kroeber, inf n. 1903 (Bull cr.). 



Lolsel ( lol ' tobacco' , sel ' people ' ) . The 

 name applied to the Wintun living in and 

 about Long valley, e. of Clear lake. Lake 

 CO., Cal. Their territory extended w. to 

 the summit of the mountain range just E. 

 of Clear lake and was there contiguous 

 to Poino territorv. (s. a. b. ) 



lold'-la.— Powers in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., in, 219, 

 1877. loldlas.— Powers in Overland Mo., xiii, 542, 

 1874. lol'-sel. — Powers in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., in, 

 219, 1877. 



Lomavik. A Kuskwogmiut Eskimo vil- 

 lage on the left bank of Kuskokwim r., 

 Alaska; pop. 81 in 1880, 53 in 1900. 

 lomavigamute. — Nelson (1879) quoted by Baker, 

 Geog. Diet. Alaska, 269, 1902. lomavik,"— Baker, 

 ibid, lomawigamute. — Petroff, Rep. on Alaska, 

 .53,1881. 



Lompoc. A former Chumashan village 

 near Purisima mission, Santa Barbara 

 CO., Cal. — Tavlor in Cal. Farmer, Oct. 18, 

 1861. 



Lone Wolf ( Guipd^go) . A Kiowa chief, 

 one of the 9 signers of the treaty of Medi- 

 cine Lodge, Kans., in 1867, by which the 



