m-LL. .SO] 



OOKWOLIK OPAMENT 



137 



in the Sitting Bui) uprising of 1870, which 

 is doubtful. 



Neither contagion nor war materially 

 reduced the number of the Oohenonpa, 

 which seems to have remained compara- 

 tively stationary up to 1887, when it was 

 reported as 642, the last separate offit-ial 

 enumeration. They reside on Cheyenne 

 River res., 8. Dak., with Sihasapa, INIini- 

 conjou, and Sans Arcs. 



Only two subdivisions were known to 

 Dorsey, theOohenonpah and Mawakhota. 

 Kettle band.— Culbertson in Smithson. Rep. 1S50, 

 1-1'2, 1851. Kettle band Sioux. — Cummin.a: in 11. R. 

 Ex. Doc. 65, 34th Cong., 1st sess., 4, 185(i. NiK'- 

 a-o-cifi'-a-is. — Hayden, Ethnog. and Philol. Mo. 

 Val., 290, 18i)'J (Cheyenne name). Ohanapa.— 



AN OOHENONPA, OR TWO-KETTLE SIOUX 



Brackett in Smithson. Rep. 466, 1876. Ohenonpa 

 . Dakotas. ^Hayden. J^thnog. and Philol. Mo. Val., 

 map. 1862. Obenonpas. — Keane in Stanford, Com- 

 pend., 527, 1878. Oohenoijpa.— Riggs, Dakota 

 Gram, and Diet., xvi, 18,52. Oohe-ncpa. — Dorsev 

 in 1.5th Rep. B. A. E.. 220, 1897: MeGee, ibid., 161. 

 Oohenoupa. — Hind, Red R. E.xped., ii, 1.54, 1860. 

 Tbree Kettles.— Ind. AfF. Rep. 18-56, 68, 1857. Two 

 Cauldrons.— De Smet. Letters, 37, note, 1,S43. Two 

 Kettle.— Gale, Upper Miss., 226, 1867. Two Ket- 

 tles.— Riggs, Dak. Gram, and Diet., xvi, 1852. Two 

 Rille band. — Ind. AfT. Rep., 296, 1846. Wo-he- 

 nom'-pa. — Hayilen, op. eit., 371. 



Ookwolik. A tribe of Eskimo about 

 Sherman inlet in the Hudson Bay re- 

 gion. — Gilder, Schwatka's Search, " 199, 

 1881. 



Oolachan. See Eularhon. 



Ooltan. A former rancheria, probably 

 of the Papago, visited by Father Kino in 

 1701 ; situated in n. w. Sonora, Mexico, 3 

 leagues n. w. of Busanic (q. v.). 

 S. Estanislao Octam. — Bancroft, No. Mex. States, 

 I. 502, 1884 (after Kino). S. Estanislao Ooltan.— 

 Bancroft, ibid., 497. 



Ooltewah (corruption of UltiwcVl, of un- 

 known meaning). A former CheroKee 

 settlement about the present Ooltewah, 

 on the creek of the same name in James 

 CO., Tenn. — Mooney in 19th Rep. B. A. F , 

 542, 1900. 



Oomiak. The large skin boat or "wo- 

 man's boat" of the Eskimo; spelled also 

 ^un^ak; from the name of this vessel in the 

 eastern Eskimo dialects. (a. f. c. ) 



Oonilgaclitkliokh. A Koyukukhotana 

 village, of 17 persons in 1844, on Koyu- 

 kuk r., Alaska. — Zagoskin quoted by Pe- 

 troff in 10th Census, Alaska, 37, 1884. 



Oonossoora ( ' poison hemlock ' ) . A Tus- 

 carora village in North Carolina in 1701. — 

 Lawson, Hist. Car., 383, 1860. 



Oony. A former Choctaw town on an 

 affluent of ujiper Chickasawhay r., ,s. of 

 the present Pinkney Mill, Newton cc, 

 MLss. — Brown in Pub. Miss. Hist. Soc, 

 VI, 443, 1902. 



Oosabotsee. A band of the Crows. 

 Butchers.— Morgan, Anc. Soc, 159, 1877. Oo-sa- 

 bot-see. — Ibid. 



Oosaukaunendauki. See Onondakai. 



Oothcaloga ( U>/gihVg1, abbreviated from 

 Tsuyu(jild^g1, ' where there are dams,' i. e. 

 beaver dams). A former Cherokee set- 

 tlement on Oothcaloga (Ougillogy) cr. 

 of Oostanaula r., near the present Cal- 

 houn, Gordon co., Oa. — Mooney in 19th 

 Rep. B. A. E., 54.5, 1900. 



Ootlashoot. According to Lewis and 

 Clark a tribe of the Tushepaw nation 

 (q. V.) in 1805-06, residing in spring and 

 summer on Clarke r. within the Rocky 

 mts., and in the fall and winter on the 

 Missouri and its tributaries. Pop. 400 in 

 33 lodges. 



Cutlashoots.— Robertson, Oreg., 129, 1846 (mis- 

 print I. Eoote-lash-Schute. — Orig. .lour. Lewis and 

 Chirk, HI, 54, 1905. Oate-lash-schute.— Ibid., vi, 

 114, 1905. Oat-la-shoot.— Lewis and Clark Ex- 

 ped., I, map, 1814. Oat-lash-shoots. — Orig. .lour. 

 LewisandClark.v, 112, 219,1905. Oat-lash-shute.— 

 Ibid., VI, 120, 1905. Oleachshoot. — Gass, Journal, 

 132, 1,807. Olelachshook. — Chirk in Jan.son, Stran- 

 ger, 233, 1807. Olelachshoot.— Lewis, Travels, 22, 

 1809. Oote-lash -shoots. -Orig. .lour. Lewis and 

 Clark, III, 1113, 190-5. Oote-lash-shutes.— Ibid., 5.5. 

 Ootlashoots.— Lewis and Clark Kxped., i, 440, 1814. 

 Ootslashshoots. — Orig. Jour. Lewis and Clark, v, 

 180, 1905. Shahlee.— Lewis and Clark Exped., ii, 

 333, 1814. Shalees.— Ibid., 329. Shallees.— Ibid., 

 324 (Chopunnish name). 



Opa. The fourth Chilula village on 

 Redwood cr., Cal. 



Oh-pah. — Gibl>s in Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, in, 

 139, 18.53 (Yurok name). 



Opament. An Algonquian village in 1608 

 on the E. bank of the Patuxent, in Calvert 

 CO., Md. The inhabitants were pri)l)ably 

 absorbed by the Conoy. — Smith (1629), 

 Va., I, map, repr. 1819. 



