796 



TOTSTALAHOEETSKA TOWALT 



[b. a. e. 



Totopotomoi was survived by his widow, 

 Queen Anne (q. v.), who held a promi- 

 nent place in Virginia Indian history for 

 40 years. He figures also in Butler's satire 

 Hudibras. Totopotomoy cr., Va., takes 

 its name from him. (j. m. ) 



Totstalahoeetska. A former Seminole 

 town on the w. side of Tampa bay, Fla. 

 Its population was made up chiefly of 

 Upper Creeks who fled there after the 

 war of 1813-14. 



Totstalahoeetska, — Bell in Morse, Rep. to Sec. War, 

 306, 1822. Watermelon Town.— Ibid. 



Totuskey. A division of the Powhatan 

 confederacy, comprising the Moraughta- 

 cund and 8ecacawoni tribes, in Virginia. 

 In 1608 the two tribes numbered 180 

 warriors, while 60 years later they were 

 reduced to 70 warriors. 

 Totuskeys.— Jefferson, Notes, 138, 1801. 



Touaguainchain. A Huron village in 

 Ontario in 1615 (Champlain, 1615, 

 (Euvres, iv, 28, 1870). A note by the 

 editor of Champlain suggests that it may 

 have been the Sainte Madeleine of the 

 Jesuit Relation of 1640. 



Touchouasintons ( ' village of the pole ' ). 

 A band of we.stern Dakota, perhaps the 

 Wazikute of the Yanktonai. 



Touchouaesintons. — Shea, Early Voy., Ill, 1861. 

 Touchouasintons, — Le Sueur (1700) quoted by 

 Neill, Hist. Minn., 170, 1858. 



Touenho. A former Onondaga hamlet, 

 situated in 1688 s. of Brewerton, which is 

 at the w. end of L. Oneida, N. Y. 

 Goienho.— Jes. Rel. 1656, 12, 1858 (given as the 

 name of L. Oneida, but "it has been mentioned 

 and probably belonged to Brewerton."— Beau- 

 champ). Tou-en'-ho. — Beauchamp, Aborig. Place 

 Names, 153, 1907. 



Tougoulas (interpreted by Gatschet as 

 from Choctaw Hi, 'forest'; okla, 'peo- 

 ple': 'forest people', but more likely 

 ' Tioux people ') . One of the 9 Natchez 

 villages at the close of the 17th century. 

 —Iberville in Margry, Dec, iv, 179, 1880. 



Touladi. The great lake-trout {Salve- 

 linus namaycush) , called by the French 

 Canadians queue-fourchue; a word writ- 

 ten also tuladi, in use among the fisher- 

 men and settlers, French and English, of 

 E. Quebec. According to Chambers (The 

 Ouananiche, 270, 1896) touladi is the name 

 of this fish in the Micmac and Abnaki 

 dialects of Algonquian. (a. f. c.) 



Toulibi. See Tulibee. 



Tonpa. A chief or tribe in alliance with 

 the chief of Audusta (Edisto), S. C., and 

 in friendly relations with the French in 

 1562. The name is indicated as that of a 

 village, inland from Port Royal, on the 

 De Bry map of 1591 (Le Moyne Narr., 

 Appleton trans., 1875). 



Touppa— Laudonnifere (1562) in French, Hist. Coll. 

 La., n. s., 201, 1869. 



Touraxcuslins. Mentioned by Tonti 

 (French, Hist. Coll. La., i, 82, 1846), in 

 connection with the Kickapoo, as a tribe 

 living apparently in Illinois, about the 

 head of Illinois r., in 1690. Possibly the 

 Mascoutens. 



Tourima. One of the early Quapaw 

 villages, situated on the w. bank of the 

 Mississippi, probably near the mouth of 

 the Arkansas. It is stated by more than 

 one authority that the people of tins village 

 and of Tongigua were at least for a time 

 united in one village. Father Poisson 

 (1720 ) places all the vi I lages on Arkansas r . 

 When the Quapaw migrated they applied 

 the old names to their new settlements, 

 even when they finally settled on their 

 reservation in the present Oklahoma. 



Thoriman. — Joutel (1687) in Margry, D^c, ill, 444, 

 1878. Ti'-u-a'-djji-man. — Dorsey in 15th Rep. 

 B. A. E., 229, 1897. Tiwadima".- Gatschet, Creek 

 Migr. Leg., I, 30, 1884. Toreman,— Charlevoix 

 quoted bv Shea, Discov., 170, 18.52. Torima,— P6ni- 

 eaut (1700) in Margry, Dec, v, 402, 1888. Toriman.— 

 Hennepin, New Discov., pt. 2. 45,1698. Torimanes. — 

 Barcia, Ensayo, 288, 1723. Torinan.— Crepy, Carte 

 de I'Am., n.d. Torremans. — Tonti (1687) in French, 

 Hist. Coll. La., l, 71, 1.S46. Tourima. — Gravier 

 (1701) in Shea, Earlv Vov.,131, 1861. Tourimans.— 

 P6nicaut (1700) in French, Hist. Coll. La., n. s., i, 

 62, 1869. 



Tova. A Kawia village in Cahuilla 

 valley, s. Cal. 



Agua Dulce. — Barrows, Ethno-Bot. Coahuillalnd., 

 34, 1900. Toro.— Burton (1856) in H. R. Ex. Doc. 

 76, 34th Cong., 3d sess., 117, 18.57 (probably 

 identical). To-va. — Barrow.s, op. cit. 



Toviscanga. A former Gal)rieleno ran- 

 cheria at or near San Gabriel mission, 

 Los Angeles co. , Cal. A ccording to Taylor 

 this was the name of the site of the mis- 

 sion, and near by was a large rancheria. 

 See Sihagiia. 



Tobiscanga,— Taylor in Cal. Farmer, Feb. 22, 1860. 

 Toviscanga. — Ibid., May 11, 1860. Tuvasak.— A. L. 

 Kroeber, inf n, 1905 (Luiseno name). 



Tovu {T'o'vu). The Fire clan of the 

 Hopi. Cf. Turou. 



Towahhah. A Salish division formerly 

 in extreme n. w. Washington, now on 

 Lummi res.; pop. 90 in 1867. 

 No-ah-ha.— Mallet in Ind. A(T. Rep., 198, 1877. 

 Noo-wha-ha.— U. S. Stat, at Large, xn, 927, 1863. 

 No-wha-ah.— Finkbower in Ind. Aff. Rep. 1867, 59, 

 1868. Tow-ah-ha.— Gibbs in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., 

 I, 180, 1877. 



Towahnaliiooks, The name said by 

 Lewis and Clark to have hen\ applied by 

 the Eneeshur and the Skilloot to Des 

 Chutes r., Oreg. , and also to a Shoshoni 

 band which lived on the upper waters 

 thereof in spring and summer but spent 

 the fall and winter months on the Wil- 

 lamette. The name of the stream is 

 spelled by Lewis and Clark in various 

 ways, as Chahwahnahiooks, Towahnahi- 

 ooks, Towanahiooks, Towannahiooks, 

 Towarnaheooks, Towarnahiooks, etc. 

 Towahnahiook. — Lewis and Clark Exped., Coues 

 ed.. Ill, 913, 1893. Towanahioohs.— Ibid., 949. 

 Zwan-hi-ooks. — Lee and Frost, Oregon, 177, 1844. 



Towakwa. A former pueblo of the Je- 

 mez of New Mexico; definite location 

 unknown. 



To-ua-qua.— Bandelier in Arch. Inst. Papers, iv, 

 207, 1892. To-wa-kwa. —Hodge, tield-notes, B. 

 A. E., 1895. 



Towalt. A local name of a species of 

 salmon {Salmo confluentus) found in the 

 waters of Puget sd. and elsewhere on the 

 N. w. Pacific coast; from tmuatlin, the 



