BULL. 30] 



SUCHIGIN — SUHUB 



647 



aboriginal name for the preparation that 

 we call succofnsh has been lost. The form 

 of the name would have been determined 

 by the preponderance of corn or of beans 

 in the stew, as may have been the case, 

 since no Algonqnian word can be formed 

 to indicate that more than one vegetable is 

 contained in a stew or soup. ( w. r. g. ) 



Suchigin. A former village, presuma- 

 bly Costanoan, connected with Dolores 

 mission, San Francisco, Cal. — Taylor in 

 Cal. Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861. 



Suchui. A former village, presumably 

 Costanoan, connected with Dolores mis- 

 sion, San Francisco, Cal. 

 Suchni.— Bancroft, Nat. Races, I, 453, 1874. Su- 

 chui.— Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861. 



Suckatash. See Succotash. 



Sudac. A Maricopa rancheria on the 

 Rio Gila, Ariz., in 1744.— Sedelmair 

 (1744) cited by Bancroft, Ariz, and N. 

 Mex., 366, 1889. 



Sudacsasaba. A Maricopa settlement 

 on the Gila r. , Ariz. , in the 18th century. 

 Sudacsasaba.— Rudo Ensayo (ca. 1762), 22, 1863. 

 Sudacsassaba. — Orozco y Berra, Geog., 348, 1864. 



Sudacson. A former Pima settlement 

 on the Rio Gila, Pinal co., Ariz., between 

 Casa Grande and a point 10 leagues be- 

 low. It was visited by Kino in 1698, 

 possibly as early as 1694, and named by 

 him Encarnacion. It was not far from 

 the present Sacaton. According to Font 

 the population was 5,000(?) in 1775. 

 See Bartlett, below. 



Encarnacion. — Bancroft, No. Mex. States, I, 259, 

 note, 1884. Encarnacion Sutaquison.^Anza and 

 Font (1780) quoted by Bancroft, Ariz, and N. Mex., 

 392, 1889. La Encarnacion.— Venegas, Hist. Cal., 

 I, 297, 1759. la Encarnacion del Sutaquison.— 

 Garc6s (1775), Diary, 106, 1900. Sudacson.— Rudo 

 Ensavo {ca. 1762), 21, 1863. Sutaguison.— Bartlett, 

 Pers."Narr., ii, 268, 1854. Sutaquisan— Humboldt, 

 Kingdom of New Spain, ii, 303, 1811 (also Suta- 

 quizan; see index, vol. iv). Sutaquisau. — Squier 

 in Am. Rev., ii, 512, Nov. 1848. Sutaquison. — 

 Garc6s (1775), Diary, 109, 1900. 



Sudagunachte. See Sadekanaktie. 



Sugar. See MapJe sugar. 



Sugarcane. A Shuswap village on the 

 E. side of Fraser r., Brit. Col. — Morice in 

 Trans. Can. Inst. 1892-93, iv, 22, 1895. 



Sugeree. A small tribe, supposed to 

 have been Siouan, that lived near the 

 Waxhaw in Mecklenburg co., N. C, and 

 York CO., S. C. They occupied a fertile 

 district and, according to Lawson (Hist. 

 Car., 76, 1860), inhabited many towns 

 and settlements. They were doubtless 

 greatly reduced by the Yamasee war of 

 1715 and later merged in the Catawba. 

 Sagans. — Bowles, New Pocket map of U. S., 1783. 

 Satarees.- Popple's map, n. d. Sugans.— Vaugon- 

 dy's map, 1778. Sugaus.— Bowen's map, 1760. 

 Suturees.— War map (1715) in Winsor, Hist. Am., 

 V, 346, 1887. 



Sagk-eye. See Sockeye. 



Sugwaundugahwininewug ( Sdgiodnddga- 

 tvininiwdg, ' men of the dense- wooded 

 forest.' — Gerard). A Chippewa band, 

 commonly known as Bois Fort Chippewa, 

 living in the coniferous forest region w. 

 of L. Superior, in Minnesota. They 



numbered 640 in 1909 and occupy lands 

 allotted in severalty from a reserva- 

 tion formerly consisting of 107,519.42 

 acres. 



Boise Forte.— Ind. Aff. Rep., 332, 1873. Bois 

 Forts.— Warren (1852) in Minn. Hist. Soc. Coll., v, 

 85, 1885. Hardwoods.— Ibid. Sagantwaga-winini- 

 wak.— Gatschet, Ojibwa MS., B. A. E., 1882. 

 Sagwandagawinini.— Baraga, Eng.-Otch. Diet., 109, 

 1878 (trans. 'Indian^ from the thick forests': Chip- 

 pewa form ) . S^gwandagawininiwag. — Wm. Jones, 

 inf'n, 1905. Sakawiyiniw.— Baraga, op. cit. 

 Sug-wau-dug-ah-win-in-e-wug. — Warren (1852) in 

 Minn. Hist. Soc. Coll., v, 85, 1885. Sug-waun- 

 dug-ah-win-ine-wug. — Warren in Schoolcraft, 

 Ind. Tribes, ii, 139, 1852 (trans, 'men of the 

 thick fir woods' ) . Sug-wun-dug-ah-win-in-e-wug. — 

 Ramsey in Ind. Aff. Rep., 90, 1850. Thick Woods- 

 men. — Warren in Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, ii, 139, 

 1852. Waub-ose.— Warren (1852) in Minn. Hist. 

 Soc. Coll., v, 86, 1885 ('rabbits': so called by other 

 Chippewa on account of their unwarlike dispo- 

 sition). 



Suhinimint ( ' people of the sun, ' that is, 

 living in the east). A tribe of Labrador 

 Eskimo extending from Koksoak r. e. to 

 C. Chidley and thence s. to Hamilton in- 

 let. A part have long been Christianized 

 by Moravian missionaries, but those of the 

 northern districts still retain their heathen 

 customs. Girls are tattooed at the age of 

 puberty, though less elaborately than for- 

 merly; they are then forced into marriage, 

 and early show the effects of their harsh 

 and laborious life. Children are few and 

 weak. Many men have two wives, the 

 wealthy several. The aged and the dis- 

 eased are frequently deserted, sometimes 

 quietly strangled. An unlucky woman is 

 driven out into the wilderness. A bad 

 man is not admitted into the houses, and 

 if he commits umrder the others stone 

 him to death. Blood vengeance is in- 

 cumbent on the next of kin. The people 

 are of the stature of Europeans and very 

 muscular. Their legs are disproportion- 

 ately short and malformed, owing prob- 

 ably to the habit of carrying infants in 

 the" hood. There is a recognized elder in 

 the community, yet he is controlled by 

 the angekok. These conjurers, who pre- 

 tend to propitiate the malevolent spirits 

 of nature and each man's evil spirit, work 

 much harm, often separating man and 

 wife on the plea that their union causes 

 ill luck. The people often devour deer 

 meat raw, though they prefer cooked 

 food. The complexion of these Eskimo 

 shows much variation; those who are 

 bleached almost white in winter become 

 quickly browned by exposure to the 

 summer sun. 



Subtribes are the Koksoagmiut, Kan- 

 givamiut, and Kilinigmiut. The mission 

 stations are Hebron, Hopedale, Nachvak, 

 Nain, Okak, Ramah, and Zoar. A native 

 village on the n. coast is Aukpatuk. 

 Siihinimyut.— Turner in 11th Rep. B. A. E., 176, 

 1894. Sukhinimyut.— Turner in Trans. Roy. Soc. 

 Can., V, 104, 1888. 



Suhub. The Cottonwood clan of the 

 Hopi. 



Si-he'-bi.— Stephen in 8th Rep. B. A. E., 39, 1891. 

 Suhiib winwii.- Fewkes in 19th Rep. B. A. E., 584, 



