BOLL. 30] 



SAai SAHEWAMISH 



409 



Shequallisere in 1752. Several chiefs 

 bore the same name. Cf. Sakanssa, 

 Sequareesere. (w. m. b.) 



Sagi ( ' bear ' ). A Yuchi clan. 

 SagEe'.— Speck, Yuchi Ind.s., 70, 190G. Sagitaha.— 

 Gatschet, Uchee MS., B. A. E., 70, 1885 (= 'bear 

 gens'). 



Sagin. A Costanoan village situated in 

 1819 within 10 m. of Santa Cruz mission, 

 Cal.— Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Apr. 5, 1860. 



Saginaw {Sdginawa, 'mouth of a 

 river.' — Gerard. Cf. Sagnenay). A 

 former villau;e situated near the present 

 Saginaw, Mich. It was first occupied by 

 the Sauk, and when deserted by that tribe 

 it was settled by a band of Ottawa and 

 Chijjpewa, known as Saginaw, who con- 

 tinued to reside there until 1837, when 

 they removed beyond the Mississippi. 

 The term was also officially employed to 

 designate all the Chippewa of eastern 

 lower Michigan from Thunder bay south- 

 ward, (j. M. ) 

 Osaginang. — Keltnn, Ft. Mackinac, 9, 1884 (Ciiip- 

 pewa niime ). Osaginaw. — Win. Jones, inf'n, 1906. 

 Sacenong.— N. Y. Doc. Col. Hist., IX, 293, note, 

 ISfM. Saganaws.— Detroit treaty (1837) in U. S. 

 Iinl. Treat.. 248,1873. Sagina.— Croglian (176.5) in 

 N. Y. Doc. Col. Hist., vil, 784, 1856. Saginang.— 

 Wm. Jones, inf'n, 1905 (correct form). Saginaw.— 

 Detroit treaty (1855) in U. S. Ind. Treat., '234, 1873. 

 Saguina. — Detroit treaty (1807) in Am. St. Papers, 

 Ind. Aff., I, 747, 1832. Saguinam.— Doc. of 1747 in 

 N. Y. Doc. Col. Hist., x, 119, 1858. Saguinan.— 

 Denonville (1686), ibid., ix, 295, 1855. Saguinau.— 

 Doc. of 1747, ibid., x, 128, 1858. Sakiman.— 

 Denonville (1688), ibid., ix, 378, 185.5. Sakinam.— 

 Hennep>in, New Disco v., 83, 1698. Sakinan.— Doc. 

 of 1695 in N. Y. Doc. Col. Hist., ix, 604, 1855. Saki- 

 nang. — Frontenac (1690), ibid., 450. Saquinam.— 

 Memoir of 171S, ibid.. 888. Saquinan. — Denonyille 

 (1686), ibid., 293. Sau-ge-nong.— Tanner, Narr,. 

 30, 1830. Saw-ge-nong.— Ibid., 239. 



Sagnitaouigama. An Algonkin tribe or 

 band living in 1640 s. w. of Ottawa r. in 

 Ontario (Jes. Rel. 1640, 84, 1868). They 

 were possibly the same as the Sinago. 



Sagonaquade ('he angers them'), com- 

 monly known as Albert Cusick. A de- 

 scendant of the Tuscarora chief Nicholas 

 Cusick, but an Onondaga by mother- 

 right. He was born on the Tuscarora 

 res., N. Y., Dec. 25, 1846, and lost his 

 chiefship through being a Christian. He 

 has aided various workers in linguistics 

 and folk-lure, and Horatio Hale esteemed 

 him highly. He was ordained deacon by 

 Bishop Huntington, Oct. 1, 1891, and still 

 lives (1909) on the Onondaga res., N. Y., 

 where he is influential for good. His 

 notes on Indian life are of high value to 

 ethnology. (w. m. b. ) 



Sagoquas. A Massachuset village s. of 

 Cohasset, Norfolk co., Mass., in 1614. — 

 Smith (1616) in Mass. Hist. Soc. Coll., 3d 

 3., VI, 97, 1837. 



Sagua-lanas {Sa^giia kVnas, 'people of 

 the town up the inlet'). A family of 

 the Eagle clan of the Haida. The inlet re- 

 ferred to in their name is probably Virago 

 sd. or Naden harbor. They are said to 

 have branched off from the Tohlka-gitu- 

 nai, but were afterward so closely asso- 



ciated with the Stustas as to be usually 

 regarded among the Stustas families. 

 Their town was Kung, at the entrance of 

 Naden harbor. A subdivision was called 

 Dotnskustl. — Swanton, Cont. Haida, 275, 

 1905. 



Sa'gua la'nas. — Swanton, op. cit. Sak'la'nas. — 

 Boas, Twelfth Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., 22, 1898. 

 Shagwau Lennas. — Harrison in Roy. Soc. Can., sec. 

 II, 124, 1895. 



Saguarichic (probably ' place of the sa- 

 guaro,' or giant cactus). A Tarahumare 

 settlement near San Francisco de Borja, 

 in the district of Iturbide, Chihuahua, 

 Mexico.— Orozco y Berra, Geog. , 323, 1864; 

 Censo del Estadode Chihuahua, 1904. 



Saguenay (French corruption of Sdgi- 

 ncnva, 'river-mouth,' variously spelled 

 sagina, saguinau, and saguina. — Gerard. 

 Cf. Saginaw). A group of Nascapee 

 bands that lived on Saguenay r., Quebec. 

 Saguenay.— Dutch map (1616) in N. Y. Doc. Col. 

 Hist., I, 1856. Saquenets. — French writer in Me. 

 Hist. Soc. Coll., VI, 212, 18.59. 



Sagui-gitunai {SaguV gttAnd^-i, 'GitAns 

 living up the inlet'). A family of the 

 Eagle clan of the Haida. They origi- 

 nally formed one family with the "Djahui- 

 gitinai, ))ut separated from them on ac- 

 count of some internal differences and 

 settled inMasset inlet; hence their name. 

 They occupied half of the town of Ka- 

 yang, just above Mas.set. A part of them 

 wascalled Kialdagwuns. — Swanton, Cont. 

 Haida, 274, 1905. 



Sagui' gitAna'-i. — Swanton, op. cit. Saqgui' gyit'- 

 inai'.— Boas, Twelfth Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., 23, 

 189S. Shagwikitone— Harrison in Proc. Roy. Soc. 



Can., sec. 11, 125, 1895. 



Saguikun-lnagai {SagnlJcunlnagd^-i, 'up 

 the inlet point-town peo]>le ' ) . A branch 

 of a Haida family called Kunalanas, be- 

 longing to tlie Raven clan. — Swanton, 

 Cont. Haida, 271, 1905. 



Sagunte. ^ former village, presuma- 

 bly Costanoan, connected with Dolores 

 mission, San Francisco, Cal. — Taylor in 

 Cal. Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861. 



Sagwaycangwalaghtton, See Sagenque- 

 naghta. 



Sa-haidagai {Sa xct' -idAga-i, 'people 

 living on the high ground'). A subdivi- 

 sion of the Stawas-haidagai, a family of 

 the Eagle clan of the Haida, so called from 

 the nature of the ground on which their 

 houses stood. — Swanton, Cont. Haida, 

 273, 1905. 



Saheoquiaudonqni. See Sequidongquee. 



Sahewamish. A Salish division on 

 Hammersly inlet, at the s. end of Puget 

 sd., Wash. Not to be confused with the 

 Sawamish. 



Sahawahmish.— Stevens in H. R. Ex. Doc. 37, 34th 

 Cong., 8dsc.ss., 45, 18.57. Sa-heh-wamish. — U.S. Ind. 

 Treaties, 501,1873. Sahewamish. — Gibbs quoted by 

 Dall in Cont. N. A. Ethuol., i, 241, 1877. Sahhih- 

 wish. — Ind. Aff. Rep. 18.56, 265, 1857. Say-hah-ma- 

 mish.— Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, iv, 600, 1854. Say- 

 hay-mamish.— Starling in Ind. Aff. Rep., 170, 1852. 

 Sayhaynamish. — Lane in Sen. Ex. Doc. 62, 31st 

 Cong., 1st sess., 173, 1850. Sayhaywamish.— DeHar- 



