772 



TOHOOKATOKIE TOLEMATO 



£b. a. e. 



by the Iroquois, the Tohontaenrat aban- 

 doned their village and were adopted by 

 the Seneca. See Kanagaro. (j. m.) 



Tahontaenrat.— Jcs. Rel. 1644, 93, 1858. Tohonta- 

 enras.— Jes. Rel. 1637, 113, 1858. Tohontaenrat.— 

 Jes. Rel. 1639, 50, 1858. Tohotaenrat.— Parkman, 

 Jesuits, map, 1883. 



Tohookatokie. Mentioned together with 

 Wichita, Caddo, Biloxi, Alabama, Dela- 

 wares, Shawnee, Creeks, Choctaw, Chick- 

 asaw, Quapaw, and a number of others as 

 troublesome intruder!-i in Texas in 1849. 

 The list as given contains several duplica- 

 tions and other errors. This name can 

 not be identified with any regular tribe 

 name, and may possibly be intended for 

 a band of Cherokee under the leadership 

 of the chief Degataga, known to the 

 whites as Tokatoka. (j. m.) 



Tahookatuke.— Latham, Var. of Man, 350, 1850. 

 Tohookatokies.— Catlett (1849) in Ind. Aff. Rep., 

 1849, 33, 18-50. Tuhuktukis.— Latham, op. cit. 



Tohopeka (Creek: Tuhupki, from itu- 

 hi'ipld, 'wooden fence,' and, by extension, 

 'fort'). The Horseshoe, or Great Bend 

 of Tallapoosa r., Ala., the site of a tem- 

 porary fort where the warlike remnants 

 of the Creeks, numbering 1,000, experi- 

 enced their last and decisive defeat from 

 the American army under Gen. Jackson, 

 with its Cherokee allies. Mar. 27, 1814, 

 leaving 557 dead on the field. See Drake, 

 Bk. Inds., bk. 4, 60, 1848. (a. s. g.) 



Tohopekaliga (Creek: 'fence or fort 

 placed there' ). A former Seminole vil- 

 lage, probably on the shore of a lake of 

 the same name in s. w. Orange co., Fla. 

 Philip was their chief in 1837. 

 Tohopikaliga.— H. R. E.x. Doc. 74 (1823), 19tli 

 Cong., 1st sess., 27, 1820. Tohopkolikies.— Drake, 

 Bk. Inds., bk. 4, 140, 1848. Topchalinky.— H. R. 

 Doc. 78, 25th Cong., 2d sess., map, 768-9, 1838 

 (probably identical). Topekaliga. — Jesup (1837), 

 ibid., 65. 



To-ho-sa. See Dohasan. 



Tohoti. The Puma clan of the Chua 

 ( Rattlesnake) phratry of the Hopi. 

 To'-ho-iih wun-wii. — Fewkes in Am. Anthr., vii, 

 402, 1894 ( iruil-uni =c\ein). Tohou-winwii. — Fewkes 

 in 19th Rep. B. A. E., 582, 1900. 



Toikhiclii. A former Yokuts (Maripo- 

 san) tribe on Kings r., Cal. — A. L. Kroe- 

 ber, inf'n, 1906. 



Toikiming. A village of Praying In- 

 dians in 1659, on Nantucket id., Mass.— 

 Cotton (1659) in Mass. Hist. Soc. Coll., 

 Ists., I, 204, 1806. 



Toisa. A Potawatomi village, named 

 from the chief, which formerly occupied 

 the w. bank of Tippecanoe r., nearly op- 

 posite Blooniingsburg, Fulton co., Ind. 

 The reservation was sold in 1836. — Tippe- 

 canoe treat v (1832) in U. S. Ind. Treat., 

 702, 1873. 



Toiwait {To-i-wait). A Paviotso tribe 

 formerly about the lower sink of the Car- 

 son, w. Nevada (Powell, Paviotso MS., 

 B. A. E., 1881) . They were said to num- 

 ber about 400 in 1870, most of them hav- 

 ing been removed to the e. part of the 

 territory. 



Toy Pah-Utes.— Campbell in Ind. Aff. Rep., Ill, 

 1870. Toy Pi-Utes.— Ind . Aff. Rep. , 1 19, 1806. Toy'- 

 yu-wi-ti-kut'-teh. — Powers, Inds. W. Nevada, MS., 

 B. A. E., 1876 (formerly at the upper sink of the 

 Carson; sig. ' tule eaters' ; said to have been ap- 

 plied also to the Paviotso at the lower sink). 



Tojagua. Mentioned by Onate (Doc. 

 Ined., xvr, 115, 1871) as a pueblo of New 

 Mexico in 1598. Itwaspossibly Keresan. 

 Toajgua.— Bancroft, Ariz, and N. Mex., 136, 1889 

 ( misquoting Onate) . Toyagua. — Columbus Mem. 

 Vol., 155, 1893 (misprint). 



Tok. A Koyukukhotana village on an 

 island at the junction of Koyukuk r. with 

 the Yukon, Alaska, having 6 inhabitants 

 in 1844. 



Tok.— Baker, Geog. Diet. Alaska, 1902. Tokha- 

 kate. — Zagoskin in Nouv. Ann. Voy., 6th s., xxi, 

 map, 1850. Tok-kakat. — Tikhmenfef quoted by 

 Baker, ibid. Tok-khakat.— Zagoskin quoted by 

 Petroflf in 10th Census, Alaska, 37, 1884. 



Tokaunee's Village. A former mixed 

 Winnebago and Menominee village, 

 named after a chief, situated on the site 

 of Mauston, Juneau co.. Wis., in 1837. 

 It contained only five or six wigwams. — 

 De la Ronde in Wis. Hist. Soc. Coll., 

 VII, 359, 1876. 



Tokeatl's Village. A summer camp of 

 a Taku chief in Alaska; pop. 26 in 1880. — 

 Petroff in 10th Census, Alaska, 32, 1884. 



Tokoaath( Tok^od'ath, 'Toquat proper'). 

 A sept of the Toquart, a Nootka tribe. — 

 Boas in 6th Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., 32, 

 1890. 



Tokoais {Tok'OiVb, 'looking down on 

 his family ' — the name of an ancestor). 

 A division of the Nuhalk, a subdivision 

 of the Bellacoola of the coast of British 

 Columbia. — Boas in 7th Rep. N. W. 

 Tribes Can., 3, 1891. 



Tokoanu. The Black-ant clan of the 

 Ala (Horn) phratry of the Hopi. 

 To-ko'-a-nu wtin-wu. — Fewkes in Am. Anthr., vn, 

 401, 1894 (((■(( »-)('(■( =clan). 



Tokochi. The Wildcat clan of the Hopi. 

 Tokotci winwii.— Fewkes in 19th Rep. B. A. E.,584, 

 1900. To-ko-tci wuii-wii. — Fewkes in Am. Anthr., 

 vn, 404, 1894. 



Tokogalgi (Creek: 'tadpole people'). 

 A small Yuchi town on Kichofuni cr., an 

 affluent of Flint r., s. w. Georgia. 

 Toc-so-gul-egau.— Hawkins (1799), .Sketch, 63, 1848. 

 Tohogalias.— Moll map in Humphreys, Acct., 1730. 

 Tokogalgi.— Gatschet, Creek Migr. Leg., i, 146,1884. 



Tokonabi (Hopi: 'place of the running 

 water in the canyon.' — Fewkes). A ru- 

 ined pueblo in s. Utah, in the neighbor- 

 hood of the junction of the Little Colo- 

 rado with the Colorado, known by tra- 

 dition as the place whence came the Ala 

 (Horn) and the Chua (Snake) clans of 

 the Hopi. 



Tokonabi. -Fewkes in 19th Rep. B. A. E., 587, 

 1900. Tokoonavi.— Voth, Traditions of the Hopi, 

 30, 1905. 



Toktakamai ( ' place of thimble-ber- 

 ries ' ). A Squawmish village on the right 

 bank of Squawmisht r., w. Brit. Col. 

 Tawkamee.— Brit. Adm. chart, no. 1917. Tokta'- 

 kamai.— Hill-Tout in Rep. Brit. A. A. S., 474, 1900. 

 Tqt'a'qumai.— Boa.s, MS.,B. A.E., 1887 



Tolemato. A Yamasee village and mis- 

 sion station about 1595 on the coast of 



