BULL. 30] 



SHAKEHAND SHALLATTOO 



521 



people'). A Choctaw elan of the Wa- 

 takihulata phratry. — Morgan, Anc. Soc, 

 162, 1878. 



Shakehand. Principal chief of the 

 Yankton Sioux in 1804. He was the 

 leader in the council with Lewis and 

 Clark, neld opposite the present city of 

 Yankton, S. Dak., when the explorers 

 were going up the Missouri r. He had 

 previously visited Mackinaw and St 

 Louis. (d. r. ) 



Shakes' Village. A summer camp of the 

 head Stikine chief Ceks, on Etolin id., 

 Alaska; poj). 38 in 1880.— Petroff in Tenth 

 Census, Alaska, 32, 1884. 



Shakian ( ' beaver' ). A Yuchi clan. 

 Cagan'.— Speck, Yuchi Imls., 70. 1909 {c = sh). 

 Shakiao taha.— Gatschet, Uchee MS., B. A. E., 71, 

 1885 ( = 'beaver clan'). 



Shakkeen. A (former?) Salish village 

 or band under Fraser superintendency, 

 Brit. Col.— Brit. Col. map, Ind. Aff., 

 Victoria, 1872. 



Shakopee (Shakpe, 'six'). The name 

 of a succession of chiefs of the Mdewa- 

 kanton Sioux, residing on Minnesota r. 

 not far from the present town of Shako- 

 pee, Scott CO., Minn. Three men of 

 the name are mentioned in succession. 

 The first met Maj. S. H. Long at the 

 mouth of the Minnesota in 1817, when 

 he came up to distribute the presents 

 which Lieut. Z. M. Pike had contracted 

 to send them 12 years earlier, and Long 

 found him very offensive. This Shako- 

 pee was succeeded by his son, who was 

 known as Eaglehead Shakopee, and he 

 by his son Little Six (Shakopeela), who 

 was a leader in the Minnesota massacre 

 of 1862. HeeTaoapa. (d. r.) 



Shakori. A small tribe associated with 

 the Eno and Adshusheer in North Caro- 

 lina in the 17th century. It is doubt- 

 ful, from their physical characteristics, 

 whetherthey were of Siouan stock, though 

 they were allied with Siouan tribes. As 

 the Shakori were constantly associated 

 with the Eno they were probably linguis- 

 tically related to them. They are first 

 mentioned by Yardley (1654), who says 

 a Tuscarora Indian described to him 

 among other tribes of the interior "a 

 great nation called Cacores," of dwarfish 

 stature, not exceeding that of boys of 14 

 years, yet exceedingly brave and fierce 

 in fight and active in retreat, so that 

 even the powerful Tuscarora were un- 

 able to conquer them. They were then 

 near neighbors of the Eno. Lederer 

 (1672) found the villages of the two 

 tribes about 14 m. apart, that of the 

 Shakori being farthest w. In 1701 Law- 

 son found the two tribes confederated, 

 and the Adshusheer with them. Their 

 village, which he calls Adshusheer, was 

 on Eno r. about 14 m. e. of the Oc- 

 caneechi village, probably a short dis- 

 tance N. E. of the present Durham, N. C. 



They resembled the Eno in their customs. 

 According to Col. Barnwell, commander 

 in the Tuscarora war of 1711, they are 

 identical with the Sissipahaw. Consult 

 Mooney, Siouan Tribes of the East, 

 Bull. B. A. E., 1894. 



Cacores.— Yardley (1654) in Hawks, N. Car., ii, 19, 

 1858. Schoccories.— Lawson (1701), Hist. Car., 384, 

 1860. Shabor.— Ha\vk.s, N. Car., ii, map, 1858 

 (misprint). Shacco.— Bvrd (1733), Hist. Dividing 

 Line, 11,2,1866. Shacioes.— Barnwell (1711) in S. C. 

 Hist, and Geneal. Mag., ix, 31, 1908. Shackory.— 

 Bvrd, op. cit., 15. Shakor. — Lederer, Discov.,map, 

 1672. Shoccories.— Lawson (1701), Hist. Car., 96, 

 1860. 



Shakskakeu ('great heron'). A sub- 

 phratry or gens of the Menominee. — 

 Hoffman in 14th Rep. B. A. E., 42, 1896. 



Shaktabsh. A body of Salish who lived 

 on Port Washington bay, Kitsap co., 

 Wash. ; now on Port Madison res. 



Shak-tabsh. — Boulot, letter. Mar. 22, 1886. 

 S'hak-tabsh.— Mallet in Ind. AfF. Rep., 198, 1877. 



Shaktoligmitit {Shakto^iigrnut). A sub- 

 division of the Malemiut Eskimo of 

 Alaska, whose village is Shaktolik. 



Chakhtogmut.— Zagoskin, Descr. Kuss. Poss. Am., 

 pt. 1, 72, 1847. Shakto'ligmut.— Dall in Cont. N. 



A. Ethnol., I, 16, 1877. Tchakh-toligmiouth.— Za- 

 goskin in Nouv. Ann. Voy., 5th s., xxi, map, 1850. 



Shaktolik. A Malemiut village on the 

 E. coast of Norton sd., Alaska, inhabited 

 by descendants of the native tribe and 

 invaders from Kotzebue sd. 

 Shaklolik.— Post-route map, 1903. Shaktolik,— 

 Dall in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., l, 16, 1877. Shakto- 

 lit.— 11th Census, Alaska, 165, 1893. 



Shakwabaiyaki ('blue or green running 

 water pueblo'). A ruined pueblo, for- 

 merly occupied by the ancestors of the 

 Hopi, situated opjwsite Hardy station on 

 the Santa Fe Pacific R. R., near the 

 mouth of Chevlon cr., Ariz. 

 Blue Running Water pueblo. — Fewke.s in 22d Rep. 



B. A . E. , 31 , 1904. Cak wabaiyaki. — I bid . , 23 ( Hopi 

 name). Chevlon ruin. — Ibid., 23. 



f hakwalengya. The Blue or Green 

 Flute clan of the Ala (Horn) phratry of 

 the Hopi. 



Cakwalenya wiiiwii. — Fewkesin 19th Rep. B. A.E., 

 5!S3, 1901 (ivinicii = 'elan' ). Ca-kwa'-len-ya wiin- 

 ■wii.— Fewkes in Am. Anthr., vii, 401, 1894. 



Shalawa. A Chumashan village located 

 by Taylor near Santa Ines mission, Cal. ; 

 given by Ventura Indians as formerly 

 between Santa Barbara and Carpenteria, 

 in the locality now called La Matanza. 

 Cal-a-wa. — Heiishaw, Buenaventura MS. vocab., 

 B. A. E., 1n84. Shalawa.— Taylor in Cal. Farmer, 

 May 4, 1S60. Shhalwaj. — Henshaw, op. cit. 



Shalikuwewich [Cal-i-ku-ive'-witc). A 

 former Chumashan village at a place 

 called Las Lajas, on the coast in Ventura 

 CO., Cal.— Henshaw, Buenaventura MS. 

 vocab., B. A. E., 1884. 

 Shalicuwewech. — Henshaw, op. cit. 



Shalkahaan {C'alkafulan). AformerChu- 

 mashan village in the interior of Ventura 

 CO., Cal., at a locality called La Cafiada 

 del Salto. — Henshaw, Buenaventura MS. 

 vocab., B. A. E., 1884. 

 Sholchohoon. — Henshaw, op. cit. 



Shallattoo (Yakima: W'shd^natn, 'huc- 

 kleberry', the name of a site on Yakima r. 

 above Ellensburg). A tribe, numbering 



