BULL. ;{U] 



OGLALA OIAUR 



111 



liy Yankton). Oknaka. — Winiamsoii in .Scliool- 

 fnift, Ind. Tribes, i, 249, 1^51. Onkdaka.— Ibid. 

 O-toh'-son. — Havden, Kthnog. and Philol. Mo. 

 Val., 290,1862 ('little stars': Chovenne name). 

 Oyer-lal-lah.— Hoffman in H. R. Ex. Doc. 30, 33d 

 Con,tr., 2d sess., 3, 18p5. Te'-ton,-o-kan-dan-das. — 

 Lewis and Clark, Discov., table, 30, 180G. Teton 

 Okandandes. — Ramsey in Ind. Aff. Rep. 18J9, 87, 

 1850. Tetons Okandandas.— Lewis, Trav., 171, 1809. 

 Ubchacha.— Dorsey, Dhegiha MS. Diet., B. A. E., 

 1878 (Omnlia and Ponca name) . 



Oglala. A subdivision of the Oglala 

 Sioux. 



Ogallallas.— Ind. Aff. Rep., 250, 1875 (one of t)ie 

 four divisions of the tribe). Oglala-hfa. — Dorsey, 

 infn, 1880 ('true Oglala' ). Oglala proper.— Robin- 

 son, letter to Dorsey, 1879. 



Oglalaichicliagha ('makes himself an 

 Oglala'). A band of the Brule Teton 

 Sioux. 



Og-la'-la.— Hayden, Ethnog. and Philol. Mo. Val., 

 376, 1862. Oglala-icicaga.— Cleveland quoted bv 

 Dorsey in l.=)th Rep.' B. A. E., 219, 1897. Oglala-itc'- 

 itcaxa. — Ibid. 



Ohagi [O-ha-gi, 'it compressed it.' — 

 Hewitt). The Seneca name of a Tusca- 

 rora (?) village formerly on the w. side of 

 Genesee r., a short distance below Cuy- 

 lerville, Livingston CO., N. Y. — Morgan, 

 League Iroq., 434, 468, 1851. 



Ohaguames. A former tribe, probably 

 Coahuiltecan, of the province of Coahuila, 

 X. E. Mexico, members of which were 

 irathered into the mission of San Juan 

 Bautista on Sabinas r. — Orozco y Berra, 

 Geog., 303, 1864. 



Ohamil. A Cowichan tribe on the s. side 

 of lower Fraser r., Brit. Col., just below 

 Hope; pop. 55 in 1906. 



Ohamiel.— Can. Ind. Aff., 78, 1878. Ohamil.— Ibid., 

 pt. H, 160, 1901. O'Hamil.— Ibid., 309, 1879. Oha- 

 mille.— Ibid., 1889, pt. 1, 268, 1890. Omail.— Brit. 

 Col. map, Ind. Aff., Victoria, 1872 (given as the 

 name of a town). 



Ohanhanska ( ' long reach in a river ' ) . A 

 former band and village of the Magayu- 

 teshni division of the Mdewakanton 

 Sioux, on Minnesota r., consisting, in 

 1836, of 80 people, under Wamditanka, 

 or Big Eagle, also known as Black Dog. 

 Big Eagle's band.— Gale, Upper Miss., 251, 1867. 

 Black-dog.— Ind. Aff. Rep., 282, 1854. Black 

 Dog's.— Long, Exped. St Peter's R., l, 380, 1824. 

 Black Dog's band.— Cullen in Ind. Aff. Rep. 1859, 

 68, 1860. Oanoska.— Long, Exped. St Peter's R., i, 

 385, 1824. Ohah-hans-hah.— Prescntt in School- 

 craft, Ind. Tribes, ll, 171, 1852. 0-hah-kas-ka-toh- 

 y-an-te.— Catlin, N. Am. Inds., ii, 134, 1844 (from 

 (iliiuiliaiiskn taoi/ate, 'long reach, its people'). 

 Shunkasapa. — Williamson in Minn. Geol. Rep., 

 110, 1884 ('Black Dog'). Wah ma dee Tunkah 

 band.— Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, ni, 612, 1853 

 (Wanmditanka, 'Big Eagle'). 



Ohanoak. An important Chowanoc vil- 

 lage in 1586 on the w. side of Chowan r., 

 not far below Nottoway r., probably in 

 Hartford co., N. C. 



Blinde Towne.— Lane ( 1586) in Hakluyt, Vov., ill, 

 312, 1810 (so called bvthe English). Ohanoak.— 

 Ibid. Ohanock.— Lane in Smith (1629), Va., i, 87, 

 repr. 1819. Opanock.— Martin, N. C, 1, 13,1829 (mis- 

 print). 



Ohathtokhoucliy. A former Seminole 

 town on Little r.,40m. e. of Apalachicola, 

 in Gadsden co., Fla., in 1823.— IL K. Ex. 

 Doc. 74, 19th Cong., 1st sess., 27, 1826. 



Ohdihe (iromohdilia", 'to fall into an ob- 

 ject endwise'). A band of the Sisseton 



Sioux, an offshoot of the Witawaziyata. — 

 Dorsey in 15th Kep. B. A. E., 217, 1897. 



Ohenonpa ( ' two boilings ') . A ])and of 

 the Brule Teton Sioux. 



O-he-nom'-pa. — Hayden, Ethnog. and Philol. Mo. 

 Val., 376, 1S62. Ohe-noijpa. — Cleveland quoted by 

 Dorsevin 15th Rep.B. A. E., 219,1897. Ohe-no-pa.- 

 Ibid. 



Oherokouaehronon ( ' people of the grass 

 country.' — Hewitt). An unidentified 

 tril)e mentioned with many others in a 

 list of peoples dwelling above the Sault 

 St Louis of St Lawrence r. in 1640 (Jes. 

 Rel. 1640, 35, 1858). The list is imper- 

 fect, containing duplicate names given as 

 separate tribes. 



Ohetur ( Ohet'ur). The Yurok name of 

 a Karok village opposite and below Or- 

 leans Bar, Klamath r., x. w. Cal. — A. L. 

 Kroeber, infn, 1905. 



Ohiyesa. See Eautman, Charles. 



Ohkonkemme. A village in 1698 near 

 Tisbur\', Marthas N'inevard, Mass. — Doc. 

 of 1698 in Mass. Hist. Soc. Coll., Ists., x, 

 131, 1809. 



Ohotdusha [O-hot-du'-slia, 'antelope'). 

 A band of the Crows. — Morgan, Anc. Soc, 

 159, 1877. 



Ohrante. A Mohawk warrior in 1776, 

 called Oteroughyanento when he and 

 Joseph Brant met Lord Ciermain in Lon- 

 don, Mar. 14 of the year named. He 

 seems to be the Aruntes whose name ap- 

 pears on one of the Montreal medals, sev- 

 eral of which have been connected with 

 Indians of that jieriod. (w. m. b. ) 



Ohuivo ('the place to which they re- 

 turned'). A Tarahumare rancheria in a 

 barranca of that name on the extreme 

 headwaters of the Rio Fuerte, in w. 

 Chihuahua, Mexico. The Indians live in 

 both houses and caves, in one of the latter 

 of which, containing the remains of 

 ancient habitations, the Tubare are said 

 once to haved welt. — Lumholtz, Unknown 

 Mex., I, 187-192, 1902. 



Ohytoucoulas. One of the Taensa vil- 

 lages in the 17th century. — Iberville 

 (1699) in Margry, Dec, iv, 179, 1880. 



Oiaht. A Nootka tribe on Barclay sd., 

 w. coast of Vancouver id., Brit. Col. 

 Ahadzooas is their principal village. Pop. 

 159 in 1902, 145 in 1906. 

 Ho'aiath.— Boas in 6th Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., 

 31, 1890. Ohey-aht.— Can. Ind. Aff. 1880, 315, 1881. 

 Ohiat.— Mavne, Brit. Col., 251, 1861. Ohyaht.— 

 Sproat, Savage Life. 308, 1868. Ohyats.— Mavne, 

 op. cit., 270. Oiaht.— Can. Ind. Aff. 1883, 188, 1884. 

 Oiatuch.— Grant in Jour. Rov. Geog. Soc, 293, 1857. 

 Oyty-aht.— Brit. Col. Maj), Ind. Aff., Victoria, 1872. 



Oiaur. A former rancheria of the So- 

 baipuri or Papago, visited byFather Kino 

 in 1697 and 1699, and named by him San 

 Agustin. Situated on the Rio Santa Cruz, 

 5 or 6 leagues n. of San Xavier del Bac, s. 

 Ariz., of which mission it was a visita in 

 1732. At the latter date the two settle- 

 ments had 1,.300 inhabitants. 

 Oiaur.— Mange (1699) quoted by Bancroft, Ariz, 

 and N. Mex., 358, ls89. S. Agustin.— Kino, map 

 ( 1701 ) , ibid., 360. S. Agustin Oiaur.— Bernal (1697) , 



