760 



TIPPECANOE TITYMAGG 



[B. A. E. 



name). Kethepecannank. — Rupp, W. Penn., 264, 

 1846. Kethtipecanunk.— Scott (1791) in Am. State 

 Papers, Ind. Aff., i, 131, 1832. Kethtipiconunck. — 

 Scott, ibid., 133. Pems-quah-a-wa. — Hough, map 

 in Indiana Geol. Rup. lss-2, 1883 (mi.sprint of 

 Prophet's name). Prophet's Town.— Heald (1812) 

 in Am. State Papcr.s.Ind. Aff. , i, 806, 1832. ftuitepco- 

 muais. — Hamtramck {ca. 1790), ibid., 87. ftuite- 

 piconnae. — Gamelin (1790), ibid., 93. Tippacanoe. — 

 Schermerhorn (1812) in Mass. Hist. Soc. Coll., 2d s., 

 II, 6, 1814. Tippecanoe. — Wilkinson (1791) in Am. 

 State Papers, Ind. Aff., i, 135, 1832. 



Tippecanoe. A Miami village which 

 preceded that of the Shawnee on the 

 same site. 



Atihipi-Catouy.— Iberville {ea. 1703) in Margry, 

 Dee., IV, 597, 1880. Ortithipicatony. — Iberville as 

 quoted in Minn. Hist. Soc. Coll., 1, 341, 1872. 



Tipsinah. A name of ' ' the wild prairie 

 turnip, used as food by the northwestern 

 Indians" (Bartlett, Diet, of American- 

 isms, 707, 1877). This plant is also known 

 as the Dakota turnip, and tipsinah is 

 derived from tipsinna, its name in the 

 Sioux language. (a. p. c. ) 



Tipsistaca. A village, presumably Cos- 

 tanoan, formerly connected with San 

 Juan Bautista mission, Cal. 

 Tipisastac— Engelhard t, Franc, in Cal., 398, 1897. 

 Tipsistaca. — Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Nov. 23, 1860. 



Tirans. A Delaware tribe or band for- 

 merly living on the n. shore of Delaware 

 bay, about Cape Mav or Cumberland 

 CO., N. J. 



Tiascons.— Evelin (1648) quoted by Proud, Penn., 

 I, 114, 1797. Tirans.— Ibid. 



TisattTinne. A former Chastacosta vil- 

 lage on the N. bank of Rogue r., Oreg. 

 Ti-sat iunne.- Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, iii, 

 234, 1890. 



Tisechu. The principal village of the 

 Choinimni, at the confluence of King's 

 r. and Mill cr., s. central California. 

 Tis-e'-chu.— Powers in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., in, 370, 

 1877. Tishech.— A. L. Kroeber, inf n, 1907 ( Vokuts 

 dialectic form). Tishechu,— Ibid, (another form). 



Tisepan (//.§=' Cottonwood'). A Chiri- 

 cahua clan or band at San Carlos agency, 

 Ariz. They may be identical with the 

 Tizsessinaye and correlated to the Titses- 

 senaye of the Pinal Coyoteros. 

 Dosapon.— White, MS. Hist. Apaches, B. A. E., 1875. 

 Sapon.— Gatschet, Zwolf Sprachen, 65, 1876. Tise- 

 pan.— ten Kate, Reizen in N. A., 197, 1885. Tose- 

 pon.— Gatschet, Yuma-Spr., ix, 371, 1877 (irans. 

 'make bread'). 



Tishim. The tribal name given for the 

 mother of a child baptized at San Antonio 

 de Valero mission, Texas, in 1753. The 

 only clue to the affiliation of her tribe is 

 that she was married to a Yojuan, whose 

 tribe was Tonkawan (Valero Baptisms, 

 1753, partida, 874, MS.). (h. e. _b.) 



Tishrawa. Given as a Karok village 

 just below the junction of Salmon and 

 Klamath rs., n. w. Cal., in 1851. 

 Tish-rawa.— Gibbs (1851) in Schoolcraft, Ind. 

 Tribes, lll, 150, 1853. 



Tishum ( TV-shum) . A small settlement 

 of the Maidu on the right bank of Feather 

 r., Cal., between the Bear and the Yuba. 

 Teeshums. — Powers in Overland Mo., xii, 420, 1874. 

 Ti'-shum.— Powers in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., Ill, 282, 

 1877. 



Tisquantum. See Squanto. 



Tistontarae tonga. An unidentified tribe 

 destroyed bv the Iroquois a few years 

 before 1680.— La Salle (1682) in Margry, 

 D^c, II, 237, 1878. 



Tiswin. See Fermentation. 



Titami. See Tatemy. 



Titicut {Keh-teih-tuk-qtd, 'on the great 

 river.' — Eliot). Avillage of Christian In- 

 dians in Middleborough town, Plymouth 

 CO., Mass., near the present Titicut, proba- 

 bly subject to the Massachuset. In 1698 

 the inhabitants numbered 40 adults. 

 They sold their last land in 1760. (j. m.) 



Cotuhticut.— Drake, Bk. Inds., bk. 3, 10, 1848. Cotuh- 

 tikut. — Bourne (1674) in Mass. Hist. Soc. Coll., 1st 

 s., 1,198,1806. Kehtehticut. — RawsonandDanforth 

 (1698), ibid., X, 134,1809. Keketticut.— Writer of 

 1818, ibid., 2d s., vii, 143, 1818. Ketchiquut.— Cot- 

 ton (1674), ibid., 1st s., I, 200, 1806. Ketehiquut.— 

 Backus, ibid., iii, 150, 1794. Ketehtequtt.— Cotton 

 (1678), ibid. ,4ths., viii, 245,1868. Ketticut.— Writer 

 of 1818, ibid., 2d s., vii, 143, 1818. Teeticut.— Win- 

 throp (1636), ibid., 4th s.,vl, 614, 1863. Teighta- 

 quid.— Record of 1644, ibid., 2d s., vii, 137, 1818. 

 Tetehquet.— Drake, Bk. Inds., bk. 3, 10, 1848. Teti- 

 cut.— Mass. Hist. Soc. Coll., 2d s., iv, 280,1816 (the 

 river). Tihtacutt.— Eliot (1648), ibid., 3d s., iv, 

 81,1834. Titacutt.— Winslow (1637), ibid. , 4ths., vi, 

 163,1863. Titecute.— Coddington (1640), ibid., 316. 

 Titicott.— Hinckley (1685), ibid., v, 133, 1861. 

 Titicut.— Backus, ibid., 1st s., in, 150, 1794. 



Titiyu. A village, presumably Costa- 

 noan, formerly connected with Dolores 

 mission, San JFrancisco, Cal. — Taylor in 

 Cal. Farmer, Oct. 18, 1861. 



Titlas. An Indian "province," e. of 

 Quivira, which the abbess Maria de Jesus, 

 of Agreda, Spain, claimed to have miracu- 

 lously visited in the 17th century. 

 Tidam",— Zi'irate-Salmeron (ca. 1629), Relaci6n, in 

 Land of Sunshine, 187, 1900 (apparently identical). 

 Tulas.-Vetancurt (1692) in Teatro Mex., iii,303, 

 1871 (evidently identical). 



Titlogat. An Ahtena village, not iden- 

 tified, probably of the Koltshan divi- 

 sion. — Wrangell quoted by Dall in Cont. 

 -N. A. Ethnol., i, 32, 1877. 



Titsessinaye ('little Cottonwood jun- 

 gle ' ) . A clan or band of the Pinal Coyo- 

 teros, correlated with the clan of like 

 name among the White Mountain Apa- 

 che of Arizona (Bourke in Jour. Am. 

 Folk-lore, iii, 112, 1890). See Tisepan. 



Titshotina. A Nahane tribe inhabiting 

 the country between the Cassiar ints. and 

 Liard and Dease rs., Brit. Col. In 1887 

 they numbered 70 persons. 

 Acheto-tinneh.— Dall, Alaska, 106, 1870 (= 'people 

 living out of the wind'). Ti-tsho-ti-na. — Dawson 

 in Rep. Geol. Surv. Can. 1888, 200b, 1889. 



Titskanwatichatak ( ' real Tonkawa ' ) . 

 A Tonkawa clan. 



Titskan wa'titch a'tak.— Gatschet, Tonkawa MS. 

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



Titukilsk. A Knaiakhotana village on 

 the E. shore of Cook inlet, Alaska, con- 

 taining 57 persons in 1880. — Petroff in 

 10th Census, Alaska, 29, 1884. 



Titymagg. A name used by the first 

 English settlers in the Hudson bay coun- 

 try for the whitefish {Coregonus albus). 

 Ellis (Voy. to Hudson's Bay, 185, 1748) 

 says it was called by the French white- 



