338 



QUASKY QUERECHO 



[b. a. e. 



qnartzite were worked by the native 

 tribes, and numerous flaking shops where 

 the manufacture of implements was car- 

 ried on (Dorsey in Pub. 51, Field Col- 

 umb. Mus., 1900). (w. h. h.) 



ftuasky. A name of the blueback, or 

 oquassa trout {Salmo oquassa): derived 

 from the Algonquian appellation of 

 Oquassa or Oquassac lake, Me., where 

 this fish is found. (a. f. c.) 



ftuasquen. An unidentified tribe, pos- 

 sibly the Kaskaskia, living formerly be- 

 side the Shawnee and Delawares on a 

 branch of the Ohio r. and with them in 

 alliance with the Seneca. — Iberville 

 {ca. 1702) in Margry, Dec, iv, 544, 1880. 



ftuatsino {Gnats' enox, 'people of the 

 north country ' ). A Kwakiutl tribe liv- 

 ing at the entrance of the sound of the 

 same name at the n. end of Vancouver id., 

 Brit. Col. Their gentes are Hamanao and 

 Quatsino (or Guatsenok). Their princi- 

 pal winter village in 1885 was Owiyekumi, 

 and another called Tenate was occupied 

 in summer. Pop. 22 in 1909. (j. R. s.) 

 Gua'ts'enoq. — Boas in 6th Rep. N. W. Tribes 

 Can., 53, 1890. Gua'ts'enox.— Boas in Rep. Nat. 

 Mus. 1895, 329, 1897. Kwat-se-no.— Can. Ind. Aff., 

 279, 1894. K-wats'enoq.— Boas in Petermanns 

 Mitt., xxxiii, 131, 1887. Kwatsino.— Tolmie and 

 Dawson, Vocabs. Brit. Col., 118B, 1884. Kwat-zi- 

 no.— Ibid. Kwawt-se-no.— Can. Ind. Aff., 189, 1884. 

 ftuatsenos.— Can. Ind. Aff., 113, 1879. Quatsino.— 

 Mayne, Brit. Col., 251, 1862. ftuat-si-nu.— Kane, 

 Wand, in N. A., app., 1859. 



ftuawqualalp. A Cowichan town on 

 lower Fraser r. , opposite Yale, Brit. Col. — 

 Brit. Col. map, Ind. Aff., Victoria, 1872. 



Queeah. Given in John Work's list 

 (Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, v, 489, 1885) 

 as the name of a Haida town of 20 houses 

 with 308 inhabitants in 1836-41. It was 

 perhaps Ninstints (q. v.), which was on 

 an island, Queeah being merely Guai-a, 

 'it is an island.' (j. e. s.) 



ftueelquelu. Mentioned by Onate (Doc. 

 Ined., XVI, 115, 1871) as a pueblo of the 

 province of Atripuy (q. v. ), in the region 

 of the lower Rio Grande, N. Mex. , in 1598. 



Queen Anne. The name given by the 

 English to the woman chief of the Pa- 

 munkey tribe (q. v.) of Virginia from 

 about 1675 to 1715 or later. She was the 

 widow of Totopotomoi (q. v.), chief of 

 the tribe, who lost his life in the English 

 service while aiding in repelling an inva- 

 sion by the wilder inland tribes. She first 

 appears prominently in connection with 

 Bacon's rebellion in 1675, when the 

 colonial government called on her for a 

 contingent of men to cooperate with the 

 governor's forces. She appeared at the 

 council in Indian costume, accompanied 

 by her son, and with dramatic expression 

 of grief and scorn, rejected the proposal 

 on the ground that for 20 years no reward 

 but neglect had been meted out to her or 

 her people for the death of her husband 

 and his warriors. On promise of better 



treatment she finally consented to furnish 

 the aid required. It was probably in re- 

 turn for her help on this occasion that 

 she received from Charles II the silver 

 headpiece, or "crown," inscribed to the 

 "Queen of Pamunkey," now in posses- 

 sion of the Society for the Preservation 

 of Virginia Antiquities, at Richmond. 

 Her last appearance in history seems to 

 have been in 1715 as a petitioner on behalf 

 of her oppressed people. (j. m.) 



ftueenashawakee. A Delaware village 

 on upper Susquehanna r.. Pa., about 1758. 

 According to Gerard (inf'n, 1908) the 

 forms of the name as recorded are abort- 

 ive attempts to write from memory the 

 word KwinXshukuneihdki, 'panther land 

 (or country).' 



ftueenashawakee.— Post (1758) quoted by Rupp, 

 West Penn., app., 77, 1846. Cluenishachshachki. — 

 Loskiel (1794) quoted by Day, Penn., 526, 1843. 



ftueen Esther. See Montour. 



ftueequehatcli. See Quickhatch. 



Quelaptonlilt. A former Willopah vil- 

 lage on the s. side of Willapa r., near its 

 mouth, in Pacific co.. Wash. 

 Kula'ptEn>-'Et.— Boas, field notes (Chehalisname). 

 Nia'ktcixupeneqe.— Ibid. (Chinook name). Que- 

 lap'ton-lilt.— Swan, N. W. Coast, 211, 1857. 



ftuelotetrey. Mentioned by Onate in 

 1598 as a large pueblo of the Jumano 

 (q. V. ), in the vicinity of Abo, e. of the 

 Rio Grande, in New Mexico. 

 Cueloce.— Onate (1598) in Doc. In6d., xvi, 123, 

 1871 (probably identical). Cuelotetrey.— Bando- 

 lier in Arch. Inst. Papers, iii, 167, 1890. Guelo- 

 tetreny. — Ibid, (misprint), ftuelotretrey.— Onate, 

 op. cit.,114. Zuelotetrey.— Columbus Mem. Vol., 

 155, 1893 (mi.sprint). 



ftuelqueme. A Chumashan village w. of 

 Pueblo de las Canoas (San Buenaven- 

 tura), Ventura CO., Cal., in 1542. 

 Quelqueme.— Cabrillo, Narr. (1542), in Smith, 

 Colec. Doc. Fla., 181, 18.57. Guelquimi.— Taylor in 

 Cal. Farmer, Apr. 17, 1863. 



ftuelshose. Given officially (Can. Ind. 

 Aff., 78, 1878) as a Salish band or village 

 of Fraser superintendency, Brit. Col.; 

 perhaps identical with Clahoose. 



ftuemelentus. A former Costanoan vil- 

 lage on San Francisco bay, Cal. — Taylor 

 in Cal. Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861. 



ftuemocac. A village situated in 1608 

 on the E. bank of Patuxent r., in Calvert 

 CO., Md. — Smith (1629), Va., i, map, repr. 

 1819. 



ftuems. A former tribe of Coahuila, 

 Mexico, probably belonging to the Coa- 

 huiltecan family. 



Cems. — Valero Mission baptismal rec, 18th cen- 

 tury, ftuems.— Manzanet, letter (1689), in Tex. 

 Hist. Ass'n Quar., viii, 205, 1905. ftuimis,- Doc. 

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

 Quims. — Valero Mission baptismal records, 18th 

 century. 



ftueptahua. A former Diegueiio village 

 near the headwaters of San Diego r. , San 

 Diego CO., Cal.— Sanchez (1821) cited by 

 Bancroft, Hist. Cal., ii, 442, 1886. 



ftuerecho. A Pueblo name for the buf- 

 falo-hunting Apache of the plains of e. 

 New Mexico and w. Texas, first encoun- 



