32 



BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE 



Qatschet (A. S.) — Coutiuued. 



importaut of which is " Zwolf Sprachen aus 

 dem Siidwesten Nordamerlkas," Weimar, 1876. 

 This led to his beiug appointed to the position 

 of ethnok)gist in the United .States Geological 

 Survey, under Maj. -Tohn W. Powell, in March, 

 1877, when he reiiiovcil to Washington, and first 

 employed himself in arranging the linguistic 

 manuscripts of the Smithsonian Institution, 

 now the property of the Bureau of Ethnology, 

 which forms a part of the Smitlisonian Institu- 

 tion. Mr. Gatschet has ever since been actively 

 connected with that bureau. To increase its 

 linguistic collections and to extend his own 

 studies of the Indian languages, he has made 

 extensive trips of linguistic and ethnologic 

 exploration among the Indians of Korth Amer- 

 ica. After returning from a six months' 

 sojourn among the Klamaths and Kalapuyas 

 of Oregon, settled on both sides of the Cascade 

 Range, he visited the Kataba in South Carolina 

 and the Cha'hta and Shetimasha of Louisiana 

 in 1881-'82, the Kayowe, Comanche, Apache, 

 Yattassee, Caddo, Naktche, Modoc, and other 

 tribes in the Indian Territory, the Tonkawe 

 and Lipans in Texas, and the Atakapa Indians 

 of Louisiana in 1884-'85. In 1886 he saw the 

 Tlaskaltecs atSaltillo, Mexico, a remnant of the 

 Naliua race, brought there about 1575 from 

 Anahuac, and was the tirst to discover the affin- 

 ity of the Biloxi language with the Siouan fam- 

 ily. He also committed to writing tlie Tuni^ka 

 or Touica language of Louisiana, never before 

 investigated and forming a linguistic family of 

 itself. Excursions toother parts of the country 

 brought to his knowledge other Indian lan- 

 guages : the Tuskarora, Caughnawaga, Penob- 

 scot, and Karankawa. 



Mr. tiatschet has compiled an extensive 

 report embodying his researches among the 

 Klamatli Lake and Modoc Indians of Oregon, 

 which forms Tol. II of Contributions to North 

 American Ethnology. Among the tribes and 

 languages discussed by him in separate publi- 

 cations are the Timucua (Florida), Tonkawe 

 (Texas), Tuma (California, Arizona, Mexico), 

 Chumeto (California), Beothuk (Newfound- 

 land), Creek, and Hitchiti (Alabama). His 

 numerous papers are scattered tlirough the 

 publications of the various learned societies, 

 the magazines, and government reports. 



General discussion : 



See Bancroft (H. H.) 

 Beach (W. W.) 



Chinook 



Chinook 



Chinook 



Chinook 



Chinook 



Chinook 



Chinook 



Chinook 



Cliinook 



('hinodk 



Chinook 



Chinook 



Chinook Jargon 



Chinook Jargon 



Berghaus (H.) 

 Brinton (D. G.) 

 Duncan (D.) 

 Eells (M.) 

 Featherman (A.) 

 Gallatin (A.) 

 Gatschet (A. S.) 

 Hale (H.) 

 Sproat (G. M.) 

 Whymper (F.) 

 Bancroft (H. H.) 

 Beach (W. W.) 



General discussion — 



Chinook Jargon See 

 Chinook Jargon 

 Chinook Jargon 

 Chinook Jargon 

 Chinook Jargon 

 Chinook Jargon 

 Chinook Jargon 

 Chinook Jargon 

 Chinook Jargon 

 Chinook Jargon 

 Chinook Jargon 

 Chinook Jargon 



Geographic Jiaraes : 

 Cliinook 



Continued. 



Clough(J. C.) 

 Drake (S.G.) 

 Eells (M.) 

 Gatschet (A. S.) 

 Haines (E. M.) 

 Hale(H.) 

 Nicoll(E.H.) 

 Reade (J.) 

 Sproat (G. M.) 

 Swan (J. G.) 

 AVestern. 

 Wilson (D.) 



See Gibbs (G.) 



Geological Survey; These words following a title 

 or within parentheses after a note indicate that 

 a copy of the work referred to has been seen by 

 the comjiiler in the library of the United States 

 Geological Survey, AVashington, D. C. 



Georgetown: This word following a title or within 

 parentheses after a note indicates that a copy of 

 the work referred to has been seen by the com- 

 piler in the library of Georgetown University, 

 Wa.shington,D. C. 



Gibbs (/Jr. George). Smithsouian miscel- 

 laneous collections, j 161 1 A | dictionary 

 I of the I Chinook Jargon, | or | trade 

 langnage of Oregon. | Prepared for the 

 Smithsonian institution. | By | George 

 Gibbs. I [Seal of the institution.] | 



Washington: | Smithsonian institu- 

 tion: I March, 1863. 



Title verso advertisement 1 1. contents p. iii, 

 preface pp. v-xi, bibliography pp. xiii-xiv, half- 

 title (Part I.Chinook-English) verso note I 1. 

 text pp. 1-29, half-title (Part II. English- 

 Chinook) p. 31, text pp. 33-44, 8°. 



General discussion of the language and its 

 derivation, pp. v-viii. — Short comparative 

 vocabulary (eighteen words and phrases) of 

 English, Tlaoquatch and Niitka, and Colum- 

 bian, p. ix. — Analogies between the Chinook 

 and other languages (Haeltzuk, Bolbella, Clat- 

 sop, Nutka, Cowlitz, Kwantlen, Selisli, Chi- 

 halis, Nisqually, Takamaand Klikatit), p. x. — 

 Bibliography of the Chinook Jargon (sixteen 

 entries), pp. xiii-xiv. — Dictionary of the Chin- 

 ook Jargon: Chinook-English, jip. 1-29; Eng- 

 lish-Chinook, pp. 33-43. — The Lord's prayer in 

 Jargon, with interlinear English translation, p. 

 144]. 



Copies _ seen: Astor, Bancroft, Dunbar, 

 Eames, Pilling, Trumbull, Wellesley. 



"Some years ago the Smithsonian Institu- 

 tion printed a small vocabulary of the Chinook 

 Jargon, furnished by Dr. B. R. Mitchell, of the 

 U. S. Kavy, and prepared, as I afterwards 

 learned, by Mr. Liimnet. a Catholic priest, for 

 his own use while studying the language at 

 Chinook Point. It was submitted by the Insti- 

 tution, for revision and preparation for the 

 press, to the late Professor W. W. Turner. 



