90 



NTSUWIEK NUESTRA SENORA DE GUADALUPE 



[b. a. h. 



yapamuk near Nicola r. , a few miles from 

 the w. end of Nicola lake, Brit. Col. 

 Coldwater. — Teit in Mem. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., ii 

 174, 19U0 (white man's name). Ntsaia'tko. — Ibid. 

 NtsLa'tko. — Ibid. 



Ntsuwiek (Ntsuwi^eJc). A village of the 

 Ntlakyapamuk on the \v. side of Fra^ier r., 

 27 m. above Yale, Brit. Col. — Teit in Mem. 

 Am. Mas. Nat. Hist., ir, 169, 1900. 



Nuaguntits [Xu-a^-gnn-tits). A Paiute 

 band formerly living near Las Vegas, s. e. 

 Nevada; pop. 161 in 1873. — Powellin Ind. 

 Aff. Rep. 1873, 50, 1874. 



Nualik. A ruined Eskimo village on 

 the E. coast of Greenland, lat. 67° 16'. — 

 Meddelelser om (ironland, xxvii, map, 

 1902. 



Nubviakchugaluk. A ]\Ialemiut Eskimo 

 village on the n. coast of Norton sd., 

 Alaska; pop. 30 in 1880. 



Nubviakhchugaluk. — Petroff in 10th Census, 

 Alaska, 11,1SS1. 



Nucassee {NVkuwl, or Nikiv'sV, mean- 

 ing lost) . An important ancient Cherokee 

 settlement on Little Tennessee r. , where 

 now is the town of Franklin, in Macon 

 CO., N. C. A large mound marks the site 

 of the townhouse. 



Nikwasi.— Mooney in 19th Rep. B. A. E., 527,1903 

 (or Nikw'si'). ifucasse. — Bartram, Travels, 371, 

 1792. Nuckasee. — Doc. of 17.'i5 quoted by Royce in 

 5th Rep. B. A. E., 142, 1887. Nukeza.— Doe. of 1799, 

 ibid., 1-14. 



Nuckatl. The principal village of the 

 Nuchatlitz on Esperanza inlet, w. coast of 

 Vancouver id.— Can. Ind. Aff., 264, 1902. 



Nuchatlitz ( 'mountain house. ' — Sproat) . 

 A Nootka tribe occupj'ing the village of 

 Nuchatl and others on Nuchalitz and 

 Esperanza inlets, w. coast of Vancouver 

 id. Pop. 74 in 1902, 62 in 1904, 52 in 

 1906. 



Neu-chad-lits. — Jewitt, Narr., 36, repr. 1849. Neu- 

 chalits. — Armstrong:, Oregon, 13(5, 1857. Neuchal- 

 let.— Mayne, Brit. Col., 251, 1862. Noochahlaht.— 

 Sproat, Savage Life, 308, IStiS. Nooch-aht-aht.— 

 Can. Ind. Aff. 1894, 3.57, l.s95. Nooch-ahtl-aht.— 

 Ibid.; 1896, 430, 1897. Nooch-alh-laht.— Ibi<l., IsSS, 

 188, 18,'^4. Noochartl-aht.— Ibid., 1894, 276, 1895. 

 Noochatl-aht. — Ibid., 62, 1875. Nutca'tlath. — Boas 

 in 6th Rep. N.W. Tribes Can., 31, 1890. 



Nuchawayi. The plural of Nuta, the 

 name applied by the Yokuts in the plains 

 to the Yokuts and Shoshoneari tribes of 

 the Sierra Nevada to the e. in California. 

 The Nuchawavi are mentioned as a party 

 to the treaty of Apr. 29, 1851. 

 New-chow-we.— Royee in 18th Rep. B. A. E., 782, 

 1899. Nu-chow-we. — Barbour in Sen. Ex. Doc. 4, 

 32d Cong. , spec. sess. , 255, 1853. 



Nuchek. A Chugachigmiut Eskimo 

 village where the Russians estal^lished a 

 stockade and trading post, about 1793, 

 known as Ft Konstantine, at Port Etches, 

 Hinchinbrook id., Prince AVilliam sd., 

 Alaska. Pop. 74 in 1880, 145 in 1890. 



Natcheek.— Baker, Geog. Diet. Alaska, 471, 1906. 

 Noocheek. — Ibid. Nuchek. — Ibid, (proper form). 

 Nuchig'mut.— I),-ill in Cont. N. A. Ethncil., i, 21. 

 1877 (the people 1. 'Nuohusk.— Mahonyinlnd. Aff. 

 Rep. isi;9, 57.5, 1S70. Nutschek.— Baker, op. cit. 



Nuchschi ('descended from heaven'). 

 A Knaiahkhotana clan of Cook inlet, 



Alaska. — Richardson, Arct. Exped., i, 

 407, 1851. 



Nucku, A Mi wok division on the s. 

 fork of Merced r., Cal. 



Nut'-ohu.— Powers in Cent. N. A. Ethnol., iii, 349, 

 1877. 



Nuchumatuntunne ( ' people in the tim- 

 ber country'). xV former Tututni village 

 on the N. side of Rogue r., Oreg., near the 

 mouth. 



Nu'-tcu-ma'-tumun'ne. — Dorsej'in Jour. Am. Folk 

 lore. III, 233, 1890. 



Nuchwugh. Abandof Salish, perhaps of 

 tlie Lummi, on L. Whatcom, Wash. 



Neuk-wers.— Ind. Aff. Rep.1857, 326.329, 1858. Nuch- 

 wugh.— Gibbs, MS. no. 248, B. A. E. Sticks.— Fitz- 

 hugh in Ind. Aff. Rep., 326, 18-57. Wood Indians.— 

 Simmons, ibid., 224, 18.58. 



Nuculaha. A subdivision or clan of the 

 Apohola or Buzzard phratry of the an- 

 cient Timucua of Florida. — Pareja {ca. 

 1613) quoted by Gatschet in Proc. Am. 

 Philos. Soc, XVII, 492, 1878. 



Nuculahaquo. A subdivision or clan of 

 the Apohola or Buzzard phratry of the 

 ancient Timucua of Florida. — Pareja {ca. 

 1613) quoted by Gatschet in Proc. Am. 

 Philos. Soc, XVII, 492, 1878. 



Nuculaharuqui. A subdivision or clan 

 of the Apohola or Buzzard phratry of the 

 ancient Timucua of Florida. — Pareja {ca. 

 1613) quoted bv Gatschet in Proc. Am. 

 Philos. Soc, xvii, 492,1878. 



Nudlung. A summer settlement of the 

 Akudnirmiut Eskimo on Howe bay, 

 Baffin land. 



Noodlook.— McDonald, Discov. of Hogarth'sSd., 86, 

 1S41. Nudlung.— Boas in 6th Rep. B. A. E., 441, 

 1888. 



Nuestra SeSora de Guadalupe. A Fran- 

 ciscan mission established by order of 

 the Viceroy of JNIexico on Guadalupe r., 

 Tex., about 1755, with, the purpose of 

 gathering the dispersed neophytes who 

 had been at the San Xavier missions on 

 San Gabriel r. Some of the Mayeye from 

 San Xavier de Horcasitas mission were 

 congregated there iov a time and two mis- 

 sionaries settled among them; but it does 

 not appear that any mission buildings 

 were erected, nor is it certain that the 

 mission was ever formally founded. Soon 

 afterward the missionaries were ordered 

 to San Sal)a and the place was abandoned 

 (Informe de Misiones, 1762, MS. in Mem. 

 de Nueva Espafia, xxviii, 180; Bonilla, 

 Breve Compendio, in Tex. Hist. Ass'n 

 Quar., VIII, 50-51, 1905; Arricivita, Cron- 

 ica, II, .337, 1792). (h. e. b. ) 



N. S. de Guadalupe.— Informe de Mislone.s, 1762, 

 MS., op. cit. 



Nuestra Senora de Guadalupe. A mis- 

 sion estal)lished l>y Padres Ugarte and 

 Helen in 1720-21' on the w. coast of 

 Lower California, lat. 27°. It had 5 

 visitas in the vicinity in 1726, and 4 in 

 1745, the others no dou))t having become 

 a part of one of the missions founded in 

 the meantime. In 1767 the mission 

 counted 530 baptized natives, speaking a 



