648 



SUIESIA SULAPIN 



[b. a. b. 



1900. Sii-hiib wiin-wu. — Fewkes in Am. Anthr., 

 VII, 404, 1894. 



Suiesia. A Chumashan village formerly 

 near Santa Ines mission, Santa Barbara 

 CO., Cal. — Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Oct. 18, 

 1861. 



Suisun (probably 'big expanse'). A 

 former Patwin division, probably only a 

 village, on Suisun bay, Solano co., Cal. 

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

 Soo-i-soo-nes. — Ibid., Mar. 30, 18(j0. Souissouns. — 

 Choris, Voy. Pitt., 6, 1822. Su-i-sun'.— Powers 

 in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., iii, 218, 1877. Suysum.— 

 Chamisso in Kotzebue, Voy., in, 51, 1821. 



Snk {S'iik, 'valley,' 'depression '). A 

 Ntlakyapamuk village on the e. side of 

 Fraser r., Brit. Col., below Keefer station, 

 C. P. R. R. The population of this place 

 and the neighboring village of Kimus, 

 with which later reports of Indian affairs 

 have combined it, was 74 in 1901, since 

 which date neither is mentioned. 

 Cuk'.— Hill-Tout in Ethnol. Surv. Can., 5. 1899. 

 Bheooke.— Can. Ind. Aff., 189, 1883. Shoouk.— Brit. 

 Col. map, Ind. Aff., Victoria, 1872. Snuk.— Can. 

 Ind. Aff. , 363, 1897. Sook-kamus.— Ibid. , pt. ii, 164, 



1901. S'uk.— Teit in Mem. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., ii, 

 169, 1900. Sunk.— Can. Ind. Aff., 269, 1889. Suuk.— 

 Ibid., 230, 1886. Suuk-kamus.— Ibid., 418, 1898. 



Sukaauguning. A Chippewa village 

 formerly on Pelican lake, Oneida co.. 

 Wis. 



Pelican Lake band. — W^arren (1852) in Minn. Hist. 

 See. Coll., V, 315, 1885. Sa'ka-o'ganing.— Wm. 

 Jones, inf'n, 1905. Suk-a-aug-un-in'g.— Warren, 

 op. cit. 



Sukanom. A division of the Yuki of n. 

 California, living s. of the Ukomnom of 

 Round valley. 



Sukaispoka (Saka-ispoga, 'hog-killing 

 place'). A small Upper Creek town 

 formerly in Cleburne co., Ala., on the w. 

 bank of Tallapoosa r., 12 m. above Oak- 

 fuskee, to which town it was subordinate 

 and to which the inhabitants moved prior 

 to the year 1799. (a. s. g. ) 



Hog Range.— Gatschet, Creek Migr. Leg., i, 144, 

 1884 (traders' name). Hog range. — Hawkins 

 (1799), Sketch, 48, 1848. Shuokospaga.— Alcedo, 

 Die. Geog., IV, 547, 17S8. Shuckospoja. — Bartram, 

 Trav., I, map, 1799. Soguspogus.— Swan (1791) in 

 Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, v, 262, 1855. Sokaspoge. — 

 Bartram, op. cit., 461, 1792. Sooc-he-ah. — Hawkins, 

 op. cit. Suche-poga, — Sen. Ex. Doc. 426, 24 th Cong. , 

 1st sess., 215, 1836. Suka-ishpogi. — Gatschet, op. 

 cit. Suka-ispoka. — Ibid. 



Sukechunetunne. A band or village of 

 the Chastacosta on the n. side of Rogue 

 r., Oreg. 



Su-ne'-tcu-ne' tunne. — Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk- 

 lore, HI, 234, 1890. 



Sukhutit ( ' black mouths ' ). A former 

 Arikara band under chief Sutaka, White 

 Shield. 



Blackmouths.— Culbertson in Smithson. Rep. 

 1850, 143, 1851. Sufi-ut'-it.— Hayden, Ethnog. 

 and Philol., 357, 1862. 



Sukiaug (meaning doubtful). An Al- 

 gonquian tribe formerly occupying a con- 

 siderable territory on both sides of Con- 

 necticut r. about Hartford, Conn. Their 

 principal village, of the same name, was 

 near the present Hartford. In 1730 they 

 removed to Farmington. ( J. m. ) 



Sekioge.— Goodwin (1636) in Mass. Hist. Soc. Coll., 

 4th 8., VII, 44, 1865. Sicaock.— Ludlowe (1637), 

 ibid., 2d s., VIII, 235, 1819. Sicaogg.— Writer about 

 1642, ibid., 3d s., iii, 161, 1833. Suckiang.— Hub- 

 bard (1680), ibid., 2d s., v, 307, 1815. Suckiaug.— 

 Kendall, Trav., 1, 142, 1809. Suckieag.— Writer of 

 1815 in Mass. Hist. Soc. Coll., 2d s., iii, 182, 1846. 

 Sukiaugk.— Stiles (1761), ibid., Ists., x, 105, 1809. 



Sukinatchi (Shul-ha-in-hacha, 'hog its 

 river ' ) . Given by Gatschet ( Creek Migr. 

 Leg., I, 109, 1884) as a former Choctaw 

 settlement in Lowndes and Kemper cos., 

 Miss. The mention of Lowndes co. must 

 be a mistake, the name probably referring 

 to those Choctaw living along Sukinatchie 

 or Sookanatchie cr. , in Kemper co. Hal- 

 bert does not use this as the name of a 

 town, and evidently it is a general term. 



Factory Indians, — Gatschet, op. cit. Senachas. — 

 N. Y. Doc. Col. Hist., x, 951, 1858. Shuk-hu-nat- 

 chee.— Rutherford in Ind. AfE. Rep., 877, 1847. 

 Sook-e-nock-e.— H. R. Ex. Doc. 138, 23d Cong., 2d 

 sess., 14, 1835. Su-quah-natch-ah.— U. S. Stat., IX, 

 114,1851. 



Sukkertoppen. A Danish mission and 

 Eskimo settlement in w. Greenland, lat. 

 65° 20'. — Nansen, Across Greenland, ii, 

 29, 1890. 



Sukkwan (said to be from Tlingit suq- 

 qo-dn, ' grassy town ' ) . A Haida town of 

 the Koetas family, formerly on Cordova 

 bay, in the Kaigani country, Alaska. In 

 1836-41 John Work stated the number of 

 houses here was 14 and the number of 

 people 229. Former inhabitants of this 

 town can now recall 7 houses. Petroff in 

 1880-81 gave the number of people as 141. 

 The town is now abandoned. 

 Sakoa'n.— Boas, Twelfth Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., 

 26, 1898. Shakan. —Petroff in 10th Census, Alaska, 

 32, 1884. Shakwan Haade. — Harrison in Proc. Roy. 

 Soc. Can., sec. ii, 125, 1895. Shaw-a-gan.— Dawson, 

 Q. Charlotte Ids., 173b. 1880 (after Work, 1836^1). 

 Shou a gan.— Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, v, 489, 1855 

 (after Work). Show-a-gan. — Kane, Wand. N. A., 

 app., 1859 (after Work). Ssokoan hade. — Krause, 

 Tlinkit Ind., 304, 1885. Sukkwan.— U. S. Coast 

 Surv. map of Alaska, s. E. sec, no. 8060. 

 Suqqo-an.— Swanton in 26th Rep. B. A. E., 408, 1908. 



Suko. The Sun gens of the Caddo. — 

 Mooney in 14th Rep. B. A. E., 1093, 

 1896. 



Sukshultaatanom. A branch of the Yuki 

 of N. California possessing the n. fork of 

 the Middle fork of Eel r. and Hull cr. 



Suktaloosa ('black bluff'). A former 

 temporary settlement of the Koasati, on 

 the w. bank of Tombigbee r., e. Miss. It 

 was abandoned in 1722. 



Coosada Sackla Loosa. — West Fla. map, ca. 1775. 

 Seekta loosa.— Romans, Florida, 1,334, 1775. Sukta 

 loosa.— Ibid., 332. 



Suktaloosa. A former temporary settle- 

 ment of the Koasati on Tombigbee r. 

 below the mouth of Sukenatchacr., Ala. — 

 Romans, Fla., 326, 1775. 



Suktanakamu {Su¥-ta-na-ka^-mu). One 

 of the Chumashan villages formerly near 

 Santa Ines mission, Santa Barbara co., 

 Cal. — Henshaw, Santa Inez MS. vocab., 

 B. A. E., 1884. 



Sulapin (SuV-d-ptn). A Chumashan 

 village formerly in Ventura co., Cal. — 



