BULL. 30] 



NONAWHARITSE NOOTHLAKIMISH 



81 



ently Tonkawan. At this time there 

 were also Coahiiiltecan tribes at the mis- 

 sion, but the Nonapho can not l)e identi- 

 fied witli any of the known tribes 

 (Entierros, San Antonio de Valero, MS. 

 in the custody of the Bishop of San 

 Antonio). (h. e. b. ) 



Nonawharitse. A Tuscarora village in 

 North Carolina in 1701, mentioned by 

 Lawson (1709), N. C, 383, 1860. 



Non-che-ning-ga. See Nachenln(/a. 



Nondas ( 'steep hill.' — Hewitt). A for- 

 mer Seneca village, visited in 1791 (Am. 

 State Pap., Ind. Aff., i, 151, 1832) by 

 Col. Thomas Procter, who says it lay 8 m. 

 from Squakie hill, which would place it 

 near the present Nunda, Livingston co., 

 N. Y. Mary Jemison, "the white 

 woman," lived there then. (w. m. b. ) 



Non-gee-ninga. See Nacheninga. 



Nongee's Village. A former settlement, 

 probably of the Chippewa, named after a 

 resident chief, situated about the junc- 

 tion of Jhornapple cr. with Grand r., 

 Kent CO., Mich., a few miles e. of Grand 

 Rapids. The land on which it was situ- 

 ated was ceded to the United States bv 

 the treaty of Chicago, Aug. 29, 1821. 



Nonharmin {Xor-har'-mln, 'pulling up 

 stream ' ) . A subclan of the Delawares. — 

 Morgan, Anc. Soc, 172, 1877. 



Nonhdeitazlii ( ' those who touch no char- 

 coal ' ) . A subgens of the Inkesabe gens 

 of the Omaha. 



Naqi^eit'a-baji. — Dorsev in loth Rep. B. A. E., 227, 

 1897^ Non-hde-i-ta-zhi!— F. La Flesche, inf n, 1906. 



Nonhdeitazhi. A subgens of the Tapa 

 gens of the Omaha. 



Naq0e-it'aji.— Dorsev in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 22S, 

 1897. Non-hde-i-ta-zhi.— F. La Flesche, inf n, 1906. 



Nonoava (from nono, 'father.' — Lum- 

 holtz) . A Tarahumare settlement on the 

 headwaters of Rio Nonoava, s. w. Chi- 

 huahua, ]\lexico. The inhabitants, who 

 numbered 335 in 1900, are becoming 

 completely civilized. Aj^ache raids are 

 still remembered here. 



Nonoaba. — Zaimta ( 1678) in Doc. Hist. Mex., 4th s., 

 ni,324,lSr)7. Nonoava. — Ibid. ,327. Nuestra Sonora 

 de Monserrate. — Ibid., 324. 



Nonotuc. A village near the present 

 Northampton, on Connecticut r., in 

 Hampshire co., Mass. Its inhal)itants 

 seem to have been a part of the Pocomtuc. 

 In 1653 they sold a considerable tract on 

 the w. bank of the river, extending from 

 Hatfield to the falls near Holyoke, but 

 continued to live in the English settle- 

 ment until King Philip's war in 1675, 

 when thev joined the hostiles. (.i. m. ) 



Nanatan.— Pj-nehon (16('i3) in N. Y. Doc. Col. Hist., 

 XIII, 308, 1881. Nonaticks.— Hoyt, Antiq. Res., 91, 

 1824. Nonotuck. — Ibid., 74. Northampton Indi- 

 ans. — Quanapaug- (1675) in Mass. Hist. Soc. Coll., 

 1st s., VI, 206, ISOO. 



Nonyishagi (Xo-nyish^-d-gV) . A former 

 pueblo of the Jemez of New Mexico; 

 definite locality unknown, (f. w. h.) 



Nooachh ammilh ( Noo-ach-hum-milh ) . A 

 former Chehalis village N. of Grays har- 

 bor, on the coast of Washington.— Gibba, 

 MS. no. 248, B. A. E. 



Noohooultch ( Xoo-hoo-uUch ). The Che- 

 halis name of an ancient village on the s. 

 side of Grays harbor, Wash. — Gibbs, MS. 

 no. 248, B. A. E. 



Noohtamuh ( Nooli-ta-miili) . Anuniden- 

 tified village that anciently stood on the 

 \y. end of Harbledown id., Brit. Col., in 

 Kwakiutl territory. — Dawson in Can. 

 Geol. Surv., map, 1887. 



Nookalthu {Noo-Jcalt-lm) . The site of a 

 former Chehalis village n. of Grays har- 

 bor. Wash.— Gibbs, MS. no. 248, B. A. E. 



Nookhick. See Kocale. 



Nooksak ( 'mountain men' ). The name 

 given by the Indians on the coast to a 

 Salish tribe, said to be divided into three 

 small bands, on a river of the same name 

 in Whatcom co.. Wash. About 200 

 Nooksak were othcially enumerated in 

 1906, but Hill-Tout says there are only 

 about 6 true male Nooksak. They speak 

 the same dialect as the Squawmish, from 

 whom they are said to have separated. 

 Neuk-sacks.— Fitzhugh in Ind. Aff. Rep. 1857, 328, 

 1858. Nook-saak.— Stevens, ibid., 458, 1854. Nook- 

 sac— Ibid., 17,1870. Nooksack. — Finkbower, ibid., 

 1867, 69, 1868. Nook-sahk.— Stevens, ibid., 455, 1854. 

 Nooksahk.— Gibbs in Pac. R. R. Rep., I, 433, 1855. 

 Nooksaks. — Keane in Stanford, Compend., 526, 

 187.S. Nootsak.— Ilill-Totit in Ethnol. Surv. Can., 

 55, 1902. Nugh-sahk.— Mallet in Ind. Aff. Rep., 198, 

 187>. Nuksahk.— Gibbs in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., I, 

 180, 1877. Nuk-sak.— Gibbs, Clallam and Lummi, 

 V, 1863. 



Noolamarlarmo ( Xool - a - mar - lar^ - mo, 

 'living in water'). A subclan of the 

 Delawares. — Morgan, Anc. Soc, 172, 1877. 



Noosiatsks ( Xoo-sl-atxks). The Chehalis 

 name of an ancient village on the s. side, 

 of Grays harbor, Wash. — Gibbs, MS. no. 

 48, B. A. E. 



Nooskoh {Noos-koh). The Chehalis 

 name of a former village on a creek 

 opposite Whishkah r.. Wash. — Gibbs, 

 MS. no. 248, B. A. E. 



Noot {Xo'ot, or XEru't, allied to ru'it, 

 'sleep'). A village of the Lytton band 

 of Ntlakyapamuk on the w. side of Eraser 

 r., 12 m. above Lytton, Brit. Col. 

 NEro't.— Teit in Mein. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., ii, 

 172, 1900. No'ot.— Ibid. Tent.— Can. Ind. Aff. 

 1894, 277, 1895 (misprint). Yent.— Ibid., 1898,418, 

 1899. YEo't.- Hill-Tout in Rep. Ethnol. Surv. 

 Can., 4, 1899. Yeut.— Can. Ind. Aff., pt. ii, 166, 

 1901. Yout.— Ibid., 1886, 230, 1887. Ze-ut.— Ibid., 

 1885, 196, 1885. 



Noota. One of the four bands into 

 which Lewis (Trav., 175, 1809) divided 

 the Crows. 



Noo'-ta-.— Orig. Jour. Lewisand Clark, vi, 103,1905. 

 Noo-taa. — Lewis and Clark, Jour., 136, 1840. 

 Nootapareescar. — Lewisand Clark Exped., Coues 

 ed., IV, index, 1339, 1893 (names of two divisions 

 erroneously united). 



Noothlakimish. An unidentifiable Bel- 

 lacoola division on North Bentinck Arm, 

 Brit. Col.; mentioned by Tolmie and 

 Dawson, Vocabs. Brit. Coi., 122b, 1884. 



3456— Bull. 30, pt 2—07 



-6 



