BULL. 30] 



TUEETO TUKABATCHI 



833 



quoted by Beauchamp in Bull. N. Y. State Mus. 

 no. 108, 154, 1907. Tiachton. -Beauchamp, ibid. 

 Tiatachtont. — Spangenberg (1745) in Pa. Mag., iii, 

 61, 1879. Tiojachso.— Beauchamp, op cit. Tu-e- 

 a-das'-so.— Morgan, League Iroquois, ii, 87, 1904. 



Tuerto. A former pueblo of the Tano, 

 near the present Golden City, Santa Fe 

 CO., N. Mex., which, according to Bande- 

 lier (Arch. In.>^t. Papers, iv, 124, 1892), 

 was probably abandoned in 1591 on ac- 

 count of a raid l)y other Indians. Zarate- 

 Salmeron, about 1629 (Bancroft, Native 

 Races, i, 600, 1882), states that it was one 

 of the two pueblos of the Pecos tribe. 

 Possibly identical with the Puerto (q. v.) 

 of Oiiate. 



El Tuerto. — Bandelier in Arch. Inst. Papers, iv, 

 IDS, 1892. Kaapo.— Bandelier, Gilded Man, 221, 

 1893. Ka-po. — Bandelier in Arch. Inst. Paper*, iv, 

 108, 1892 (Tano name). Tuerto.— Bandelier in 

 Ritch, N. Mex., 201, 188.5. 



Tuesapit. A Maricopa rancheria on 

 the Rio Gila, Ariz., in 1744. — Sedelmair 

 (1744) cited bv Bancroft, Ariz, and N. 

 Mex., 366, 1889. 



Tuetinini ('no- water people'). A divi- 

 sion of the IMescalero Apache who claim 

 the region about Marathon, Texas, as 

 their former home. 



Tue'tini'ni.— Mooney, field-notes, B. A. E., 1897. 

 Twe'tini'nde. — Ibid . 



Tugaloo (DugiWyl, abbreviated as 

 DugiW, and seeming to refer to a place 

 at the forks of a stream). A former 

 Cherokee settlement on the river of the 

 same name, at the junction of Toccoa cr., 

 in Habersham co., Ga. The name is 

 sometimes written Toogelah and Too- 

 goola. (j. M.) 



Dugllu'yi.— Mooney in 19th Rep. B. A. E., 516, 1900 

 (proper Cherokee name). Toogelah.— Moonev, 

 ibid, (a form sometimes used). Toogoola. — Ibid, 

 (a form sometimes used). Tugilo.— Bartram, 

 Travels, 372, 1792. 



Tugulan. Given bv Humboldt (New 

 Spain, II, 344, 1822) 'as a Yuit Eskimo 

 village in n. e. Siberia, but more likely a 

 Chukchi settlement. 



Tuhaushuwitthe ( Tu^-hau-cn-tcV-fqe). 

 A Yaquina village on the s. side of 

 Yaquina r., Oreg. — Dorsey in Jour. Am. 

 Folk-lore, in, 229, 1890. 



Tuhezep ( Tdjceze^p, shortened form of 

 xHze^ep, 'sharp ground or place for pitch- 

 ing lodges,' so called from small sharp 

 stones around there. — Teit). A Ntlakya- 

 pamuk village on the e. side of Fraser r., 

 about a mile above Lytton, Brit. Col. 

 Tayosap.— Can. Ind. Aff., 79, 1878. Tuxeze'p.— 

 Teitin Mem. Am. Mus. Nat. Hist., ii, 172, 19U0. 



Tuhitspiyet ( Tu-hVts-pl-yet, from tti, 

 'village', 'camp', 'band', and hits-pi-iiu, 

 'a point': 'village on a point or penin- 

 sula'). A band of the Skidi Pawnee. — 

 Grinnell, Pawnee Hero Stories, 239, 1889. 



Tuhkpahhukstalit ( TiiM-pah-hnh-taht, 

 'pumpkin-vine village' ). Aband of the 

 Skidi Pawnee, so named, it is said, from 

 the fact that once, after planting time, this 

 band went off on the sunnner hunt, and 

 while they were away the pumpkin vines 

 grew so luxuriantly that they climbed 



3456— Bull. 30, pt 2—07 53 



over their lodges, covering and hiding 

 them. — Grinnell, Pawnee Hero Stories, 

 237, 1889. 



Tuhukmache. A Yokuts (Mariposan) 

 tribe that probably resided on Kings r., 

 but perhai)s on the Kavveah. They 

 were one of a group of tribes of central 

 California that joined in ceding their 

 lands to the United States by treaty of 

 May 13, 1851. (a. l. k.) 



To-ke-ma-che.— Wessells (1853) in H. R. Ex. Doc. 76, 

 34th Cong., 3d sess.. 31, 18.57. Tu-huc-mach.— Rovee 

 in 18th Rep. B A. E., 782, 1899. Tu-hue-ma-ches.— 

 Barbour in Sen. Ex. Doc. 4, 32d Cong., spec, sess., 

 254, 1853. Tu-huk-nahs.— .Tohnston In Sen. Ex. 

 Doc. 61, 32d Cong.. 1st sess., 22, 1852. 



Tui ( Tu^i). The Yurok name of a Ka- 

 rok village on the w. side of Klamath r., 

 N. w. Cal., between Orleans Bar and Red- 

 cap cr. (a. l. k. ) 



Tuiban. A tribe mentioned by Langs- 

 dorff (Voy., ii, 163, 1814) as inhabiting 

 the coast of California. It seemingly be- 

 longed to the Costanoan familv. 



Tuim. The Wolf clan of 'the Tigua 

 Pueblo of Isleta, N. ]\Iex. 

 Tuim-t'ainin.- Lnmmis quoted by Hodge in Am. 

 Anthr., ix, 3.V2, 1896 (faiiiin = 'people'). 



Tuiskistiks ( Tins-kls^-t'ds, ' mosquitos ' ) . 

 A society of the Ikunuhkahtsi, or All 

 Comrades, in the Piegan tribe of the Sik- 

 sika. It is composed of men who were 

 constantly going to war. — Grinnell, Black- 

 foot Lodge Tales, 221, 1892. 



Tuiunuk ('marsh people'). The 

 Kaniagmiut Eskimo name for a division 

 of the Knaiakhotana of Cook inlet, 

 Ala.-?ka.— Hoffman, Kadiak MS., B. A. E., 

 1882. 



Tujanisuissilac. A Chumashan village 

 formerly near Santa Ines mission, Santa 

 Barbara co., Cal. — Taylor in Cal. Farmer, 

 Oct. 18, 1861. 



Tukabatchi. A former Upper Creek 

 town on the w. bank of Tallapoosa r., op- 

 posite Talasse, in Elmore co., Ala. A 

 trader's trail crossed the river at this 

 point. In later times the place became a 

 tribal center, though it suffered much in 

 the wars with the Chicka.saw. It was 

 here that Tecumseh (q. v. ) met the Upper 

 Creeks when he tried to incite them to war 

 against the United States. The people of 

 the town had several traditions in regard 

 to their origin, one of which claimed that 

 they came from the n. It is probable 

 they were in part Shawnee. They had 

 in possession certain metal plates which 

 they had preserved from time immemo- 

 rial. Adair (Hist. Ind., 178, 1775) says 

 that in his time they consisted of 5 copper 

 and 2 brass plates which were produced 

 only at the busk (q. v.). In 1799 the 

 place could muster 116 warriors, and in 

 1832 it contained 386 houses. SeeGatschet, 

 Creek Migr. Leg., i, 147-8, 1884. 

 Adgebaches. — Coxe, Carolana, 23, 1741 (perhap.s 

 identical). Is-po-co-gee.— Hawkins (1799), Sketch, 

 27, 1848 (ancient name). Ispokogi. — Gatschet, 

 Creek Migr. Leg., i, 148, 1884 (= 'tov.n of 



