854 



TUSKOKOGIE TUTALOSl 



[B. A. a. 



Mishikhwutmetunne on Coquiller., Oreg. 

 Tus-qlus' ^unne'. — Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, 

 HI, 232, 1890. 



Tuskokogie. A former Iroquois village, 

 apparently under Oneida jurisdiction, 

 situated, according to the Brion de la 

 Tour map, 1781, just above Schoherage, 

 on the w. bank of the e. branch of Busque- 

 hanna r. This is probably an error for 

 Chenango r., N. Y. (.i. n. b. h.) 



Tuslalahockaka. A former Seminole 

 town 10 m. w. of Walacooche, Fla. Alac 

 Hajo was its chief in 1823.— H. R. Ex. 

 Doc. 74 (1823), 19th Cong., 1st sess., 27, 

 1826. 



Tuslatunne. A former Chastacosta vil- 

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

 Oreg. 



Tus-la ^unne.— Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk-lore, 

 III, 234, 1890. 



Tusolivi. A tribe or subtribe living in 

 1709 on Colorado r., Texas, in a rancheria 

 with Simaomo and Yojuan. This ran- 

 cheria was visited in the year named by 

 Fr. San Buenaventura y Olivares and Fr. 

 Espinosa, of the Rio Grande missions, 

 who estimated the population of the 

 settlement at 2,500. The presence of the 

 Yojuan in the rancheria would indicate 

 Tonka wan affiliation (Diary of San 

 Buenaventura y Olivares, 1709, MS. in 

 College of Santa Cruz de Queretaro ) . See 

 Simaomo, and cf. Tusonid. (h. e. b. ) 



Tusonid. One of the tribes represented 

 at San Juan Bautista mission, on the 

 Rio Grande, Texas, in 1772 (MS. in 

 College of Santa Cruz de Queretaro, K, 

 leg. 15, doc. 10). Cf. Tusolivi. 



Tusonimon, A former Sobaipuri ran- 

 cheria about 4 leagues w. of Casa Grande, 

 near the Rio Gila, s. Arizona, visited 

 by Father Kino about 1697. 

 Sta Isabel. — Bernal (1697) in Bancroft, Ariz, and 

 N. Max., 356, 1889. Tusonimo.— Ibid. Tusoni- 

 mon. — Mange (1697) in Schdolcraft, Indian Tribes, 

 in, 303,1853; Bernal (1697) in Bancroft, Ariz. and 

 N. Mex., 356, 1889. Tussoninio. — Orozco y Berra, 

 Geog., 348, 1864. 



Tusquittali (^Da^skwUiuYyi 'rafters 

 place,' irom daskufltiDYl 'rafters,' ?/r, the 

 locative). A former Cherokee settle- 

 ment on Tusquittee cr., near Hayes ville, 

 Clay CO., N. C. The creek was named 

 after the settlement. ( J. m. ) 



Da'skwitun'yi. — Mooney in 19th Rep. B. A. E., 

 514, 1900 (native name). Tusquittah. — Present 

 map form. Tusquittee.— Doc. of 1799 quoted by 

 Royce in 5th Rep.B. A. E., 144, 1887. 



Tussawehe ( ' white knives ' ) . Probably 

 a Shoshoni tribe, although their country, 

 in the mountains along Humboldt r. and 

 Goose or., n. Nevada, adjoined that of the 

 Paiute. The name White Knives was 

 sometimes applied to the tribe because 

 of the beautiful flint found in their 

 territory from which they made 

 knives. (h. w. h.) 



Goose Creek Diggers.— Stuart, Mont., 81, 1865. 

 To'-sawee. — Ibid. Tosawitches. — Davies in Ind. 

 Aff. Rep., 129, 1861. To-si-witches.— Simpson 

 (1859), Rep. of Expl. Across Utah, 34, 1876. To-si- 



withes.— Ibid., 510. To-so-ees.— Taylor in Cal. 

 Farmer, June 26, 1863. To-so-wates.— Powell in 

 H. R. Misc. Doc. 86, 43d Cong., 1st sess., 1, 1874. 

 Toso-wes.- Dole in Ind. Aff. Rep. 1864, 14, 1865. 

 To-sow- witches. — Hurt, ibid., 1856, 228, 1857. 

 Tussa-wehe.— Gatschet in Geog. Surv. W. 100th 

 Mer., VII, 410, 1879. White Knives.— Holeman in 

 Ind. Aff. Rep., 152, 1852. 



Tustatunkhuushi. A band of the Mishi- 

 khwutmetunne formerly residing on 

 Coquille r., Oreg. 



Tiis'-ta-tiin qu'-u-ci. — Dorsey in Jour. Am. Folk- 

 lore, III, 232, 1890. 



Tustur. An unidentified tribe allied 

 with the Iroquois and the tribes of the 

 Ohio vallev, possibly the Miami. 

 Tustans.— stone, Life of Brant, I, 295, 1864. Tus- 

 turs. — Lf)rd Dorchester (1791) quoted bv Lincoln 

 in Ma.s9. Hist. Soc. Coll., 3d s., v, 159, 1836. 



Tutachro. A Chumashan village for- 

 merly near Purfsima mission, Santa Bar- 

 bara CO., Cal. — Taylor in Cal. Farmer, 

 Oct. 18, 1861. 



Tutago. A Kaiyuhkhotana village on 

 Yukon r. at the mouth of Auto r., Alaska; 

 pop. 32 in 1848. 



Tchouchago. — Zagoskin in Nouv. Ann. Vov., 5th 

 s., XXI, mai>, 1850. Ttutaho.— Tikhmenief*(1861) 

 quoted by Baker, Geog. Diet. Alaska, 82, 1901. 

 Tuttago. — Zagoskin, Descr. Russ. Po.ss. Am., map, 

 1848. Yakutskalitnik. — Raymond in Sen. Ex. 

 Doc. 12, 42d Cong., 1st sess., 26, 1871. Yakutzke- 

 lignik.— Whymper, Alaska, 264, 1869. 



Tutahaco. A name of somewhat indefi- 

 nite application. It is recorded by Cas- 

 taneda (14th Rep. B. A. E., 492, 519, 525, 

 544, 1896) as that of a province of 8 

 Pueblo villages, apparently on the Rio 

 Grande in New Mexico, 4 leagues s. e. of 

 Tiguex, visited by members of Coronado'a 

 expedition in 1540-41. The place last 

 mentioned was undoubtedly in the vicin- 

 ity of the present Bernalillo, consequently 

 the Tigua villages about the present 

 Isleta are generally regarded as having 

 formed Tutahaco province; on the other 

 hand, if the distance (4 leagues) is an 

 error, the former Piro and Tigua villages 

 E. of the Rio Grande, in the Salinas, may 

 have been meant, otherwise they were 

 the only pueblos in New Mexico or Ari- 

 zona that were not \asited by members of 

 Coronado's force. Jaramillo (14th Rep. 

 op. cit., 545) confounded Tutahaco with 

 Acoma, possibly on account of the resem- 

 blance of the last syllable to the Acoma 

 name of their pueblo (Ako). The Tigua 

 (Isleta) name of Acoma is Tidhlaucqi; and 

 of the Pueblo people who formerly lived s. 

 of them (evidently the Piro), Ti'ikahun. 

 See Bandelier in Arch. Inst. Papers, iv, 

 234 etseq., 1892. (f. w. h.) 



Cutahaco.— Domenech, Deserts, i, 88, 1853 (mis- 

 print). Tutahaco. — Castaneda and Jaramillo in 

 14th Rep. B. A. E., op. cit. Tutahuco. — Davis, 

 Span. Conq. N. Mex., 189, 1869 (misprint). Tuta- 

 liaco. — Castaiieda (1.596) in Ternaux-Compans, 

 Voy.,ix, 57, 1838 (evidently identical, although 

 used for Acoma). Tutchaco. — Gallatin in Nouv. 

 Ann. Voy., 5th s., xxvii, 264, 1851 (misprint). 

 Tutuhaco."— Castaiieda (1596) in Ternaux-Com- 

 pans, Voy., IX, 139, 1838. 



Tutalosi (Creek: tutaldsi, 'chicken,' 

 ' fowl ' ) . A former Hitchiti town on Tu- 



