784 



TONZAUMACAGUA TOPAIDISEL 



fB. A. B. 



name: trans, 'fools'). Santo.— Ind.Aff. Rep., 122, 

 1861 (misprint). Tantos.— Lane (18.>4) in School- 

 craft, Ind. Tribes, v, 689. 18.5.5. Tci-ce-kwe.— ten 

 Kate, Synonymie, 7, 18S4 ('marauders': Zuiii 

 name). Tinto.— Ind. AiT. Rep., 506, 1865 (mis- 

 print). Tondo.— Ibid., 139 (misprint). Tontears.— 

 Emorv, Recon., 96, 1848 (misprint). Tonto.— Ind. 

 Aff. Rep. 18.54, 380, 1855. Tonto-Apaches.— Mowry 

 in Ind. Aff. Rep. 18.57, 302, 1858. Tontoes.— 

 White, Hist. Apaches, MS., B.A. E., 187.5. Tonto- 

 Tinne.— ten Kate, Reizen in N. Am., 199, 1885. 

 Tontu.— Ind. Aff. Rep., 153, 1868. Touto Apaches.— 

 Stratton, Captivity, 123, 1857 (misprint). Tsji'she- 

 kwe.— ten Kate, Reizen in N.Am., '291, 1885 (Ziifii 

 name), Viniettinen-ne. — Escudero, Notic. Estad. 

 de Cliilmahua, 212, 1834. Vinni ettinenne. — Orozco 

 y Berra, Geog., 59, 1864. 



Tonzaumacagua. A small tribe repre- 

 sented at San Antonio de Valero mission, 

 Texas, in the liSth century. 



Too. A Haida town given in John 

 Work's list (Schoolcraft, Ind. Tribes, v, 

 489, 1855) as containing 10 honses and 

 196 inhabitants in 1836-41. This was 

 probably Tiun. 



Tooahk. Said to be a band of Salish on 

 Muckleshootres., Wash., in 1857. 

 Tooahk,— Gosnell in Ind. Aff. Rep. 1^57, 338, 18.58. 

 Upper Puyallup. — Ibid. 



Tooantuh (properly Dustu, a species of 

 frog; known also as Spring Frog). A 

 noted Cherokee of highly respected char- 

 acter, born near the month of Chucka- 



mogga cr. , near liOokout mtn, Tenn. , about 

 1754. He was noted for his skill in trap- 

 ping and hunting, and for his success in 

 the athletic sports of his people, ball- 

 playing in particular. Kind and amiable 

 in disposition, Tooantuh always advo- 



cated peace, and frequently exercised a 

 restraining influence on the more warlike 

 of his people, but was (juick to avenge an 

 injury to the members of his tribe. In 

 1818, when Tooantuh was about 64 years 

 of age, a party of Osage wantonly mur- 

 dered several Cherokee. Tooantuh, with 

 a band of followers, went in pursuit, and 

 by the time the Osage had reached their 

 village they were surprised by an attack, 

 their village burned, SO of them killed 

 or captured, and their band completely 

 broken. He served under (ien. Jackson 

 in the campaign against the Creeks in 

 1813-14, and was conspicuous for his cool- 

 ness and discipline shown in battle. On 

 the removal of the Cherokee to Indian 

 Ter., Tooantuh was among the first to 

 settle on a farm, devoting himself the 

 remainder of his days to agriculture. 



Tooelicans (Tuo-el-irnm). Mentioned 

 by Irving (Bonneville's Adventures, 388, 

 1850) as a tribe dwelling abmit the head- 

 waters of Wallowa r., in x. e. Oregon, 

 in connection with the Shoshoko. They 

 are spoken of as shy an<l avoiding inter- 

 course with the whites; possibly a Sho- 

 shoni band, otherwise unidentified. 



Tookseat ( Tool/seat, from pluk-slt, 

 'wolf,' lit. 'round foot'). A phratry of 

 tlie Dela wares. — Morgan, Anc. Soc, 171, 

 1877. 



Tooksetuk ('wolf'). A phratry of the 

 ^lahican. 



Mech-cha-ooh. — Barton, New Views, xxxix, 1798. 

 Took-se-tuk',— Morgan, Anc. Soc, 174, 1877. 



Tools. See Imjileineiits. 



Toopik. A tent or house; a word in 

 local use in Alaska; from iiipik in cer- 

 tain western Eskimo dialects, signifying 

 tent. ( A. F. c. ) 



Tooptatmeer. One of the two Woccon 

 towns, supposed to have lieen in Greene 

 CO., N. C, in 1709, the towns together hav- 

 ing 120 warriors. — Lawson (1714), Hist. 

 Car., 383, 1860. 



Toosey. A band of Tsilkotin, seemingly 

 named from a chief, under Williams Lake 

 aireucy, Brit. Col. Pop. 62 in 1908, 50 in 

 1910. 



Taasey.— Can. Ind. Aff. Rep. 1895, 359, 1896. Tas- 

 sey.— Ibid., 1894, 279, 1895. Toosey.— Ibid., pt. n, 

 162, 1901. Toosey's tribe.— Ibid., 1884, 190, 1885. 



Tooshkipakwisi ( Toosli - ki - pa - kiris - si, 

 ' green leaves ' ) . A subclan of the Dela- 

 wares. — Morgan, Anc. Soc, 172, 1877. 



TooaTa.wa,v'k.&ma.(Toos}i-irar-k(/-ma, 'across 

 the river'). A subclan of the Delawares. — 

 Morgan, Anc. Soc, 172, 1878. 



Toowed. One of the Dieguefio ranche- 

 rias represented in the treaty of 1852 at 

 Santa Isabel, s. Cal.— H. R. Ex. Doc. 76, 

 34th Cong., 3d sess., 132, 1857. 



Topaidisel. A Pat win tribe formerly liv- 

 ing at Knight's Landing, Yoloco., Cal. — 

 Powers in Cent. N. A. Ethnol., iii, 219, 

 1877. 



