208 



PA8SAUNKACK PATAGUO 



[b. a. e. 



Doc. Col. Hist., XIV, 709, 1883. TJncheokauke.— Doc. 

 of 1677, ibid., 733. Unquechauge. — Andros (1675), 

 ibid., 695. Unshagogs. — Keane in Stanford, Com- 

 pend., 541, 1878. Vncheckaug.— Doc. of 1667 in N. 

 Y. Doc. Col. Hist., XIV, 602, 1883. Vnquechauke.— 

 Doc. of 1668, ibid., 605. 



Passaunkack. A village of the Pow- 

 hatan confederacy in 1608, on the s. bank 

 of Mattapony r., in the n. w. part of King 

 William co., Va.— Smith (1629), Va., i, 

 map, repr. 1819. 



Passayonk ('in the valley.' — Hewitt). 

 A Delaware village on Schuylkill r., Pa., 

 in 1648. Macauley calls the band a part 

 of the Manta, and says that they lived 

 along t^ie w. bank of the lower Delaware, 

 extending into Delaware. 



Passajonck.— Bei'kman (lt'>60) in N. Y. Doc. Col. 

 Hist., XII, 310, 1877. Passajongh.— Beekman (1660), 

 ibid., 302. Passajonk.— Macauley, N. Y., II, 166, 

 1829. Passayonk.— Hudde (1648) in N. Y. Doc. Col. 

 Hist., XII, 36, 1877. Passajrunck.— Ibid., 309. 



Passing Hail's Band. A band of Mdewa- 

 kanton Sioux formerly living on Yellow 

 Medicine r., Minn., and taking its name 

 from its chief, Wasuwicaxtanxi, or Wasu- 

 ihiyayedan, otherwise known as Bad 

 Hail, Passing Hail, and Traveling Hail. 

 The band numbered 193 in 1863. See 

 Ind. Aff. Rep., 314, 1863; Minn. Hist. 

 Soo. Coll., VI, pt. 3, 3S6, 1894. 



Passycotcung. A former village of the 

 Munsee or the Delawares, but subject to 

 the Seneca, on Chemung r., N. Y. — 

 Hamilton (1760) in Mass. Hist. Soc. Coll., 

 4th s., IX, 280, 1871. 



Pastaloca. A tribe, evidently Coahuil- 

 tecan, met by Massanet, in 1691, at points 

 6 and 10 leagues s. w. of Nueces r., Texas, 

 with Querns, Pachul, O^ana, Chaguan 

 ( Siaguan ) , and Paac Indians ( Diario, 1691, 

 inMem.deNuevaEspaiia, xxvii,92, MS. ). 

 It was evidently given in his list of 1690 

 and miscopied in Mem. de Nueva Espana 

 ( XXVII, 183) as Pastalve. In 1703 this was 

 one of the tribes at San Bernardo mission, 

 and in 1738 61 families of the tribe were 

 at San Juan Bautista ( Portilla, Apuntes, 

 283, 288, 1888) . In 1720 a woman of this 

 tribe was baptized at San Antonio de 

 Valero mission and her name written 

 Pastaloca and Pastoloca. In the burial 

 record her name is entered Pastalac (Va- 

 lero Bautismos, 1720, partida 76, MS.). 

 In 1730 a daughter of two gentiles, a 

 Papan(ac?) and a Pastalath, was baptized 

 there. (h. e. b. ) 



Pastalac. — Valero Entierros, partida 249, MS. 

 Pastaloca.— Valero Bautismos, partida 76, MS. 

 Pastalocos.— Orozco y Berra. Geog., 303, 1864. 

 Pastaluc. — Massanet, op. cit., 1691. Pastalve. — 

 Velasco, Dictamen Fiscal, in Mem. de Nueva 

 Espaiia, xxvii, 183, MS. (mlscopy). Pastoloca.— 

 Valero Bautismos, partida 76, MS. Patacales. — 

 Orozco y Berra, Geog., 304, 1-864 (identical?). 



Pastancoyas. A tribe, probably Coa- 

 huiltecan, at San Bernardo mission, on 

 the Rio Grande in Coahuila, in or after 

 1703.— Orozco y Berra, Geog., 303, 1864. 



Pastanza. A village of the Potomac 

 tribe of the Powhatan confederacy on or 

 near Potomac r. in Virginia in 1608, ruled 



by a brother of the chief of the Potomac 

 tribe. It may have been one of the vil- 

 lages on Aquia cr. in Stafford co. , marked 

 on Capt. John Smith's map but not 

 named. (j. m. ) 



Paspatanzie. — Spelman {ca. 1615) misquoted by 

 Tooker, Algonq. Ser.,viii, 21, 1901. Pasptanzie.— 

 Spelman {ca. 1615) in Smith, Va., Arbered., civ, 

 1884. Pastanza.— Strachey {ca. 1612), Hist. Va., 

 39, 1849. 



Pasteal. A tribe, evidently Coahuilte- 

 can, given in Massanet's list (1690) of 

 tribes between central Coahuila and the 

 Hasinai country, a route most of which 

 he had four times passed over (Velasco, 

 Dictamen Fiscal, Nov. 30, 1716, in Mem. 

 de Nueva Espana, xxvii, 183, MS. ) . The 

 name is probably distinct from Pastalac, a 

 synonym of Pastaloca, q.v. (h. e. b. ) 

 Pastias.— Rivera, Diario.leg. 2602, 1736(identical?). 



Pastoliak. AChnagmiut Eskimo village 

 on the right bank of Pastoliak r., near the 

 s. shore of Norton sd., Alaska; pop. 80 in 

 1880. 



Pastoliak.— Tebenkof (1849) quoted by Baker, 

 Geog. Diet. Alaska, 490, 1906. Pastoliakh.— PetrofiE 

 in lOth Cen.sus, Alaska, 11, 1884. 



Pastoligmiut. A subdivision of the 

 Unaligmiut Eskimo of Alaska, formerly 

 camping at the head of Pastolik bay. 

 Paschtoligmeuten. — Wrangell quoted by Richard- 

 son, Arct. Exped., l, 370, 1851. Paschtoligmjuten. — 

 Holmberg, Ethnog. Skizz., 6, 1S55. Paschtoligmii- 

 ten. — Wrangell, Naehr., 122, 1839. Paschtuligmii- 

 ten. — Ibid. Pashtolegmutis. — Latham (1845) in 

 Jour. Ethnol. Soc. Lond., 183, 1848. Pashtolits.— 

 Keane in Stanford, Compend., 529, 1878. Pastol- 

 igmut.— Holmberg quoted by Dall, Alaska, 407, 

 1870. 



Pastolik. A Chnagmiut Eskimo village 

 on Pastolik r., Alaska; pop. 113 in 1890. — 

 Nelson in 18th Rep. B. A. E., map, 1899. 



Pastolik. A former Unaligmiut Eskimo 

 camp for hunting beluga, at the head of 

 Pastol bay, Alaska. 



Pachtolik— Zagoskin in Nouv. Ann. Voy.. 5th s., 

 XXI, map, 1850. Paschtolik. — Holmberg, Ethnog. 

 Skizz., map, 1855. Pastolik.— Dall, Alaska, 236, 

 1870. 



Pasukdhin ( ' village on a hilltop ' ) . An 

 ancient village of the Osage. The name 

 was afterward given to a settlement of the 

 Pahatsi, or Great Osage, on Verdigris r., 

 Okla. In 1850, when visited by De 

 Smet, it numbered 600 souls. 

 Bif-hill.— De Smet, W. Miss., 355, 1856 (misprint). 

 Big Hills.— Keane in Stanford, Compend., 470, 

 1878. Passoi-Ougrin.— De Smet, op. cit. jasuij^i".— 

 Dorsey Osage MS. vocab., B. A. E., 1883. Pasuk- 

 dhi".- Ibid. 



Pasnlin {Pasuli'i, ' village on a hilltop ' ). 

 A former village on Kansas r., occupied 

 about 1820 by the Kansa, when the tribe 

 had 4 villages. ( J. o. d. ) 



Pataguo. A Coahuiltecan tribe, first 

 mentioned by Massanet, Nov. 16, 1690, 

 in his list of tribes met between the pre- 

 sidio of Coahuila and the Hasinai coun- 

 try of Texas. The tribes were given in 

 the list in geographical order, and the 

 indication is that this tribe then lived 

 N. E. of the Rio Grande (Velasco, Dicta- 

 men Fiscal, Nov. 30, 1716, Mem. de Nueva 

 Espana, xxvii, 183, MS.). This view is 



