BULL. 30] 



UNKAGAEITS tTPESHIPOW 



871 



the laws of the state or territory where 

 he may reside, and the division of tribal 

 funds into individual holdings, each 

 Indian entitled to a share to be recognized 

 on the books of the Treasury of the 

 United States; payments of interest to 

 be made directly to the individual Indian 

 by name, the principal to be paid to 

 individual Indians whenever in the 

 opinion of the President they may be tit 

 to receive and use it. So only, in the 

 opinion of the Board, can Indians be 

 trained to use their property. The keep- 

 ing of permanent family records at each 

 agency, with this purpose in view; the 

 strengthening of family life among the 

 Indians by requiring a license for mar- 

 riage and by active measures to prevent 

 polygamy, are regulations adopted re- 

 cently by the Government at the urgent 

 request of the Board. 



The chairmen of the Board have been 

 Felix R. Brunot (1869-73), Clinton B. 

 Fisk (1874-77, and 1880-89 ) , A. 0. Barstow 

 (1878-79), Merrill E. Gates, (1890-99), 

 Darwin R James (1899-1909). Francis E. 

 Leupp, former Commissioner of Indian 

 Affairs; Charles J. Bonaparte, Attorney- 

 General of the United States, and Maurice 

 F. Egan, present minister to Denmark, 

 are among recent members of the Board. 

 Gen. Eliphalet Whittlesey was its secre- 

 tary from 1882 to 1899. Its present (1910) 

 officers and members are: Andrew S. 

 Draper, chairman; Merrill E. Gates, sec- 

 retary; and Commissioners Albert K. 

 Smiley, William D. Walker, Joseph T. 

 Jacobs, Patrick J. Ryan, Andrew S. Dra- 

 per, George Vaux, jr., Warren K. Moore- 

 head, and Samuel A. Eliot. The office of 

 the Board is Corcoran Building, Wash- 

 ington, D. C. (m. e. g.) 



Unkagarits ( Un/ -ka-gar-its) . One of the 

 tribes known under the collective term 

 Gosiutes, formerly in Skull valley, s. w. 

 Utah; pop. 149 in 1873. — Powell and 

 Ingalls in Ind. Aff. Rep. 1873, 51, 1874. 



Unkakaniguts {Un-ka-ka^-ni-giUs, 'red 

 land people'). A Paiute band formerly 

 in Long valley, s. w. Utah; pop. 36 in 

 1873. 



XJn-ka-ka'-ni-guts. — Powell in Ind. Aff. Rep. 

 1873, 50, 1874. TJnkar kauagats-Ta-Nouts.— Ingalls 

 in H. R. Ex. Doc. G6,42d Cong., 3d sess., 2, 1873. 



TJnkapanukuints ( Unkdpa nu-ktvints, 

 'redwater river people'). A Paiute 

 band near Cedar City, s. w. Utah. Pop. 

 97 in 1873. In 1904 there were 30 

 Paiute near Cedar City, probably the 

 remnant of this band. 



Nu-kwints. — Powell misquoted in Sen. Ex. Doc. 

 42, 43d Cong., 1st sess., 15, 1874 (separated from Un- 

 ka-pa by comma). TIn-ka-pa. — Ibid. ITnka-'-pa- 

 Nu-kuints'.— Powell in Ind. Aff. Rep. 1873, 60, 1874. 

 Unka-toma.— Ingalls in H. R. Ex. Doc. 66, 42d 

 Cong., 3d sess., 2, 1873 (probably identical). 



Tlnkclieyuta ( ' eat dung' ). A Minicon- 

 jou Sioux band. 



Ugkce-yuta.— Dorsey, after Swift, in 15th Rep. 

 B. A. E. , 220, 1897. Unktce-yuta.— Ibid. 



Unkoahs. Given by Doty (Ind. Aff. 

 Rep. 1864, 175, 1865) as one of the two 

 chief bands of the western Shoshoni, but 

 they may have been Paiute. 



Unktoka ( ' our enemies ' ) . A tribe 

 which, according to the Iowa, formerly 

 lived in n. Wisconsin and was destroyed 

 by them about the beginning of the 19th 

 centurv. — Lynd in Minn. Hist. Soc. Coll., 

 II, pt. 2, 59, 1864. 



TInojita. One of 36 tribes reported in 

 1683 to Domingo de Mendoza as being 

 friendly to the Jumano and living three 

 days' journey eastward from the junction 

 of the Rio Grande and Conchos rs., in 

 Texas.— Mendoza, Viaje, 1683-84, MS. in 

 Archivo Gen. de Mexico. 



TJnshagii ( Un^-shd-gi-V). A former 

 pueblo of the Jemez of New Mexico; defi- 

 nite location unknown. — Hodge, field 

 notes, B. A. E., 1895. 



Unuwat. A "castle" of the Mahican, 

 taking its name from the chief, situated 

 on the E. bank of Hudson r. in Rensselaer 

 CO., N. Y. — Ruttenber, Tribes Hudson R., 

 85, 1872. 



Unyijaima. Mentioned as a village, 

 presumably Costanoan, formerly con- 

 nected with San Juan Bautista mission, 

 Cal. 

 TXnijaima.— Engelhardt, Franc, in Cal., 398, 1897. 



Unyjaware (Iroquois name). Oneof the 

 5 Abnaki villages in 1700. — Bellomont 

 (1700) in N. Y. Doc. Col. Hist, iv, 758, 

 1854. 



TJpan ('elk'). A gens of the Kansa. 



O'-pa.— Morgan, Anc. Soc, 156, 1877. 0-puh" nika- 

 shing-ga.— Stubbs, Kaw MS. vocab., B. A. E., 25, 

 1877. Upa".— Dorsey in 15th Rep. B. A. E., 231, 

 1897. 



TJparch. A Maricopa rancheria on the 

 Rio Gila, Arizona, in the 18th century. 

 S. Felipe TJparch. — Sedelmair (1744) cited bv Ban- 

 croft, Ariz, and N. Mex., 366, 1889. XTparch.— 

 Rudo Ensayo (ca. 1763), 22, 1863. 



TJpasoitac. A Maricopa rancheria near 

 the great bend of the Rio Gila, Ariz., vis- 

 ited by Anza in 1744, and by Anza, Font, 

 Garc^s, and others, in 1775. 

 Oparsoitac. — Arricivita (1791) cited by Bancroft, 

 Ariz, and N. Mex., 390, 1889. Posociom.— Anza 

 and Font (1780), ibid., 392. Pueblo de los Santos 

 Apostoles San Simon y Judas. — Garci^s (1775), 

 Diary, 113, 1900. San Simon y Judas de Vpasoitac. — 

 Garces (1776), ibid., 455. S. Simon.— Arricivita, op. 

 cit. S. Simon y Judas de Opasoitac. — Anza find 

 Font (1780) cited by Bancroft, op. cit., 392. 

 TTparsoitac— Ibid. Vparsoytac. — Garc6s (1775), 

 Diary, 138, 1900. 



TTpernivik. A Danish post in w. Green- 

 land, lat. 74''. It contains 4 frame houses, 

 occupied by Danish officers and their 

 families, a wooden church, and a number 

 of Eskimo huts made of turf. — Bessels, 

 Am. Nordpol-Exped., 85, 1878. 



TJpesliipow. A tribe, related to the Cree, 

 living near the e. coast of James bay, Can- 

 ada, between Rupert and Great' Whale 

 rs., bordering on the Eskimoof Labrador. 

 One band, the Winnepeskowuk, lived on 

 East Main r., another was said to live on 

 Moose r., probably the Monsoni, who 



