862 



UCHITAK UGALAKMIUT 



[b. a. e. 



31-50, 1846; Latham,' Opuscula, 293, 1860. 

 =Yuohi.— Gatschet, Creek Migr. Leg., i, 17, 1884; 

 Gatschet in Science, 413, Apr. 29, 1887. 

 =tJchean.— Powell in 7th Rep. B. A. E., 126, 1891. 



TJchitak. An Unaligmiiit Eskimo vil- 

 lage near Tolstoi pt., Norton sd., Alaska. 

 Outchitak-Mioute.— Zagoskin in Nouv. Ann. Voy., 

 5th «., XXI, map, IS.SO. 



TJchium. A division of the Olamentke, 

 and according to Chamisso one of the 

 most numerous connected with Dolores 

 mission, Cal., in 1816. 



Aguasajuchium. — Tavlor in Cal. Farmer, Oct. 18, 

 1861 (Aguasto and Juchium (Uchium) com- 

 bined). Huchun. — Ibid. Juchium. — Ibid. Outch- 

 ioung.— Bancroft, Nat. Races, I, 453, 1874 (mis- 

 quoted from Choris.) Outchiouns. — Choris (1816), 

 Voy. Pitt., 6, 1822. TJchium.— Taylor, op. cit. 

 Vtschim. — Bancroft, op. cit. (misquoted from Cha- 

 misso). TJtschium.— Taylor in Cal. Farmer, June 

 8, 1860 (misquoted from Chami.sso). Utschiun. — 

 Chamisso (1816) in Kotzebue, Voy., in, 51, 1821. 



Uchiyingicli. A settlement of the Yau- 

 danchi, a Yokuts (Mariposan) tribe, on 

 Tule r., Cal., at the large painted rocks 

 on the present Tule River res. The word 

 has some reference to these paintings. 

 It is the name of a village site, not of a 

 tribe, as given by Powers. (a. l. k.) 

 O-ching'-i-ta. — Powers in Cent. N. A. EthnoL, in, 

 370, 1877. 



TIchucklesit. A Nootka tribe on Uch- 

 iicklesit harbor, Barclay sd., w. coast of 

 Vancouver id. , Brit. Col. Pop. 3-1: in 1910. 

 Their principal village is Elhlateese. 

 Cojuklesatuch.— Grant in Jour. Roy. Geog. Soc, 

 293, 1857. Hautcu'ktles'ath.— Boas, 6th Rep. N.W. 

 Tribes Can., 31, 1890. How-chuck-les-aht.— Can. 

 Ind. Afif., 308, 1879. Howchucklus-aht.— Brit. Col. 

 map, 1872. Howchuk-lis-aht.— Can. Ind. Aff. 1897, 

 357, 1898. Howchuklisat.— Can. Ind. AiT., pt. ll, 158, 

 1901. Howschueselet.— Kellev, Oreg., 68, 1830. 

 Ouchuchlisit.— Mavne, Brit. Col., 251, 1861. Ou- 

 chuk-lis-aht.— Can. Ind. Aff., 61, 1875. 



Ucita. The first village in Florida en- 

 tered by De Soto in 1539. It was situated 

 on the shore of Tampa bay, the town 

 house being upon a high artificial mound, 

 and was deserted by the Indians on the 

 approach of the Spaniards. ( J. n. ) 



E?ita.— Ranjel [ra. 1.546) in Bourne, De Soto 

 Narr., II, 58,1904. Opita.— Ibid., 52. TJcista.— Drake, 

 Tragedies of Wilderness, 18, 1841 (misprint). 

 Ucita.— Gentl. of Elvas (1557) in Bourne, op. cit., 

 I, 22, 1904. 



TJclemi. Mentioned by Kane (Wand, 

 in N. A. , app. , 1859 ) as the name of a tribe 

 occupying Scotts id., n. w. of Vancouver 

 id. , Brit. Col. According to Boas it is the 

 name of the island " Yutl," belonging to 

 the Nakomgilisala, compounded with 

 -cvoq, 'inhabitants of.' 



TJcluelet. A Nootka tribe at the n. en- 

 trance of Barclay sd. , w. coast of Vancou- 

 ver id. , Brit. Col. Not to be confounded 

 with the Lekwiitok. Their principal 

 town is Ittatso; pop. 150 in 1904, 132 in 

 1910. 



Emlh-wilh-laht.— Can. Ind. Aff., 310, 1892. Ewlb- 

 ■wiehaht.— Ibid., pt. 2, 1.58, 1901. Ewlhwiehaht.— 

 Ibid., pt. 2, 74, 1902. Ewl-hwilh-aht.— Ibid., 357, 

 1897. TJcle-tah.-Mavne, Brit. Col., 251, 1862. TTcM- 

 let.— Swan, MS., B. A. E. TTgluxlatuch.— Grant in 

 Jour. Rov. Geog. Soc, 293, 1857. W-ltoo-ilth-aht.— 

 Can. Ind. Aff., 308, 1879. Yongletats.- Domenech, 

 Deserts, 445, 1860. Youchehtaht.— Brit. Col. map, 

 1872. You-clul-aht.— Sproat, Savage Life, 308, 1868. 



Yutlu'lath.— Boas, 6th Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., 31, 

 1890. 



TJcouhneruiit. A former hut town of 

 the Tuscarora of North Carolina, situated 

 in 1711 on Pamlico r., probably in the 

 vicinity of the present Greenville, Pitt 

 CO. — S. C. Hist, and Geneal. Mag., ix, 

 39, 1908. 



Udekumaig {adfkamag, 'caribou fish,' 

 meaning whitefish. — ^W. J.). A gens of 

 the Chippewa. 



Ad-dik-kun-maig.— Tanner, Narr., 314, 1830. Adi- 

 'kamag. — Wm. Jones, iuf'n, 1907. Xlde-kumaig. — 

 Warren (1852) in Minn. Hist. Soc. Coll., v, 44, 

 1885. 



Udluhsen ( ' skin-scraping place ' ) . An 

 Ita Eskimo settlement on Herbert id., 

 Whale sd., n. Greenland. 

 Oomiaksoak. — Kane, Aret. Explor., Ii, 212, 1856. 

 TJdluhsen. — Stein in Petermanns Mitteil., no. 9, 

 map, 1902. 



ITedle. A Yuit Eskimo village in the 

 N. part of East cape, Siberia. 

 Ouedle.— Petroff in Tenth Census, Alaska, map, 

 1S84. TJedle. — Krause in Deutsche Geog. Blatter, 

 V, 80, map, 1882. 



Ugagogmiut. A subdivision of the Agle- 

 miut p]skimo dwelling on the banks of 

 Ugaguk r., Alaska. 



tigagog'-mut.— Dall in Cont. N. A. Ethnol., I, 19, 

 1877. 



Ugalakmiut ('far people'). A tribe of 

 Alaskan Eskimo living on the coast at the 

 mouth of Copper r. and on Kayak id. 

 According to the latest writers they have 

 been so far metamorphosed by contact 

 with the Tlingit as to be more proper]}' 

 Tlingit than Eskimo. They live mainly 

 by fishing. Between them and the Chu- 

 gachigmiut the Copper River Indians have 

 intruded ( Dall, Alaska, 401, 1870). They 

 have been classed by some as Tlingit, by 

 others as Athapascan, confusion having 

 arisen from Indian vocabularies taken 

 from visitors in the Ugalakmiut villages. 

 A distinction was made between the Uga- 

 lakmiut, who were regarded as a small 

 division of the Chingachimiut, and a sup- 

 posed Indian tribe, by some considered 

 Tlingit, by some as Athapascan, called 

 Ugalentsi. AVheu it was found that the 

 natives of Kayak and the opi)Osite main- 

 land have an Innuit vocabulary, they 

 were classed as a separate Eskimo tribe, 

 to which the name Ugalentsi was trans- 

 ferred, which is merely their own name 

 with a Russian termination ( Dall in Cont. 

 N. A. Ethnol., i, 21, 1877). Their princi- 

 pal village is Eyak. 



Guth-le-uk-qwan.— EmmonsinMem. Am.Mus.Nat. 

 Hist., Ill, 231, 1903 (Tlingit name of natives from C. 

 Yaktag, through Controller bay, and on Kayak 

 id.), lakhamute.— Petroff in 10th Census, Alaska, 

 146, 18S4. Oogahlensie.— Veniaminof ijuoted by El- 

 liott, Cond. Aft'., Alaska, 227, 1S75. Oogalenskie.— 

 Ibid., 30. Ougalachmioutsy.— (iallatin in Trans. 

 Am.Antiq. Soc, ii, 14, 1836. Ougalentze.— Petroff 

 in 10th Census. Alaska, 146, 1884. Oughalak- 

 mute.— Petroff in Am. Nat., xvi, .568, 1882. Ougha- 

 lentze. — Ibid. 'Ugalachmiuti. — Humboldt, Essai 

 Polit.,l, 347, 1811. Ugalakmutes.— Dall in Proc. 

 Am. A. A. S., xviii, 267, 1870. TTgalakmutsi.— Rich- 

 ardson, Arct. Exped., l, 402, 1851. TTgalenschen.— 

 Erman, Archiv, vii, 128, 1849. Ugalense.— Dall in 



