BULL. 30] 



PACHALOCO PADSHILAIKA 



183 



lacjue was married to a Tilpacopal at this 

 mission aa late as 1773 (ibid., partida 

 214). Orozco y Berra (Geog., 304, 1864) 

 locates the Pajalaques, who may be the 

 same, on San Antonio r. (h. e. b.) 



Pachalaca.— Morti, Hist., bk. ii, ca. IVSl, MS. 

 Pachalate. — Lihro de Casamientos. partida 214, 

 1773. MS. Pachalgagu.— Ibid., partida 61, 1743 

 (perhaps a miscopy). Pajalache. — Ibid., partidas 

 162, 163, 17'i9; andtestiniony, May 13, 1752, Bexar 

 Archives, 17.51-69, M.S. (identical?). Pajalaques. — 

 Orozco y Berra, Geog., 304, 1864. 



Pachaloco. A former tribe of n. e. Mex- 

 ico, probably Coahuiltecan, which was 

 gathered into the mission of San Juan 

 Bautista, Coahuila, at its second founda- 

 tion in 1701 (Orozco y Berra, Geog., 

 303, 1864). Evidently a division of the 

 Pachal. Cf. Fachalaque. 



Pachawal. A Kawia village in the San 

 Jacinto mts., s. Cal. Los Coyotes, a 

 name which appears to have been applied 

 to this place, is now a reservation of non- 

 arable mountainous land, comprising 

 22,640 acres, 85 m. from Mission Tule 

 River agency, transferred in 1903 to the 

 Pala agency. It contains also the Agua 

 Caliente settlement of San Ysidro or Wila- 

 kal, and the Diegueno settlement of San 

 Ignacio. The total population of the res- 

 ervation in 1903 is given as 106. 

 Cayote.— Heintzelman (1S.53) in H. R. Ex. Doc. 

 76, 34th Cong., 3d ses?., 41, 1S57. Coyotes.— Lovett 

 in Ind. Atf . Rep., 124, 1865. Los Coyotes.— Ind. Afl. 

 Rep.. 175, 1902. Pachawal.— Barrows, Ethno- 

 Bot. Coahuilla Ind., 34, 1900. San Ignacio.— Ibid. 



Pacheenaht. A Nootka tribe on San 

 Juan harbor, Vancouver id. Their vil- 

 lage is Pacheena, at the mouth of San 

 Juan r. Pop. 71 in 1897, 54 in 1906. 

 Pacheena.— Can. Ind. Aff., pt. n, 1.58, 1901. Pa- 

 cheenaht. — Sproat, Savage Life, 308, 1868, Pachee- 

 nett.— Maj'ne. Brit. Col., 251, 1862. Pachenah.— 

 Whymper, Alaska, 79, 1869. Patcheena. — Grant in 

 Jour. Rov. Geog. Soc. 293, 18.57. Patcina'ath.— 

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



Pachera. A small division of the Tara- 

 humare, and the name of their principal 

 village at the extreme headwaters of the 

 N. branch of the Rio Nonoava, under the 

 municipality of Guerrero, w. Chihuahua, 

 Mexico. According to Orozco y Berra 

 (Geog., 34, 1864) they spoke a dialect 

 slightly different from that of the Tara- 

 humare proper. 



Pachera.— Zapata (1678) in Doc. Hi.st. :Mex., 4th 

 s.. ni, 333, 18.57. Santa Rosa de Santa Maria.— Ibid. 



Pachgantschihilas. See Bnckon(iahelas. 



Pachhepes. A former village in Cali- 

 fornia, said to have been Esselen. — Tay- 

 lor in Cal. Faritier, Apr. 20, 1860. 



Pack. See Shoe-park. 



Pacohamoa ('trout'). A society or 

 gens of the Sauk. 



Pi-co-ha-mo-a.— Long, Exped. St Peter's R., ii, 231, 

 1824. 



Pacpul. A Coahuiltecan tribe at Cal- 

 dera mission, Coahuila, in 1689. It was a 

 chief of this tribe, called Juan, who as- 

 sisted in taking one of the survivors of 

 La Salle's party from n. of the Rio (irande 

 to the presidio of Coahuila (Massanet in 

 Texas Hist. Aas'n Quar., ii, 284, 1899). 



In 1691 Massanet had with him a Pacpul 

 guide who explained to the Payaya In- 

 dians at San Antonio the meaning of the 

 mass and interpreted Massanet's dis- 

 course ( Diario, Mem. de la Nueva Espafia, 

 XXVII, 96, MS.). This indicates that 

 the Coahuiltecan language extended to 

 the San Antonio, at least. (h. e. b. ) 



Pacpoles.— Rivera, Diario, leg. 2763, 1736. 



Pacsiol. A former Chumashan village 

 near Purfsima mission, Santa Barbara 

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

 1861. 



Pacuaches. A former tribe of n. e. Mex- 

 ico or s. Texas, probably Coahuiltecan, 

 members of which were gathered into 

 San Bernardo mission on the lower Rio 

 Grande, although their proper habitat 

 was 15 leagues distant. 



Paachiquis.— Massanet (1690), Dictamen Fiscal, 

 Nov 30, 1716, MS. cited by H. E. Bolton, infn, 

 1906 (probably identical). Pachagues. — Revilla- 

 gigedo (1793) cited by Bancroft, Nat. Races, i, 611, 

 1886. Pachaques.— Fernando del Bosque (1675) in 

 Nat. Geog. Mag., xiv, 347, 1903. Pachoches.— Pa- 

 dilla quoted by Orozco y Berra, Geog., 306, 1864. 

 Pacuaches. — Revillagigedo, op. cit. Paguaches. — 

 Orozco y Berra, op. cit., 307. Faguachis. — Ibid., 

 304. Parchaques.— Massanet (1690), op. cit. 



Pacuachiam. A tril)e or subtribe, prob- 

 ably Coahuiltecan, met by Massanet in 

 1691 on Rio Hondo, Texas, which was 

 called by the Indians Guanapajac. They 

 were with other tribes or bands which 

 Massanet called Sanpanal, Patchal, Papa- 

 naca, Parchiquis, Aguapiilam, Samampac, 

 Vanca, Payavtin, and Patavo. At the 

 same point INIassanet was visited by the 

 Pitahav, Apavsi, and Patsan or Patzau 

 (Diario, in Doc. Hist. Tex., i, 94, MS.). 

 The Colton map of Texas (1878) gives 

 "Paguache crossing" ju.st above Presidio 

 San Juan Bautista, on the Rio Grande. 

 Ci. Pacuachex. (h. e. b. ) 



Pacuchianis.— Massanet (1690) in Dictamen Fiscal, 

 Nov. 30, 1716, MS. (identical?). 



Paddle tablets. See Duck tablets, Prob- 

 lematical objects. 



Padjegadjin {Pa-dje^-ga-djin^, 'forest 

 extending across'). A former Kansa 

 village on Kansas r., Kan. (.i. o. n. ) 



Padli. A Padlimiut Eskimo settlement 

 at the head of the fjord of the same name 

 where the Akudnirmiut and Padlimiut 

 gather in summer to catch salmon. — Boas 

 in 6th Rep. B. A. E., map, 1888. 



Padlimiut. A tribe of Central Eskimo 

 occupying the e. coast of Baffin land from 

 Exeter to C. Hooper and numbering 43 

 in 1883. Their villages are Ekaloaping, 

 Idjuniving, Itijarelling, Karmakdjuin, 

 Kekertakdjuin, Kingnelling, Padli, and 

 Siorartijung. — Boas in 6th Rep. B. A. E., 

 441, 1888. 



Padshilaika ( Creek : ' pigeon roost ' ) . A 

 former Yuchi town at the junction of 

 Patchilaika cr. with Flint r., Macon co., 

 Ga. According to Hawkins the Yuchi 

 moved there from Savannah r. soon after 

 1729. 

 Pad-gee-li-gau.— Hawkins (1799), Sketch, 62, 1848. 



