196 THE GEORGE CATLIN INDIAN GALLERY. 



JosiAii Hill — Sa-Jco-lca-ryes. Cannibal. Tuscarora. Nanticokes, now mixed with 

 Tuscaroras. 



Eev. Albert Anthony — She-quack-nind. The Lone Pine. Delaware. Missionary 

 to Six Nations. A Delaware chief. 



Miss Jessie Osborne— Sa-pa-na. The Lily. Mohawk, and great granddaughter 

 of Captain Brant, Mohawk. 



Miss Eva H. Johnson — Ea-ra-toa-na. Drifting Canoe. Miss E. Pauline John- 

 son— ire»-2/en-??eeM-iAa. The Snow Drift. Daughters of the late chief, George H. M. 

 Johnson. Residence, Chiefswood, Tuscarora, Canada. Mohawk. 



J. T. GiLKisoN, Brantford, Ontario. Superintendent and commissioner of the 

 Six Nations Indians, Brantford, Canada. 



For historical information relating to the Iroquois and Six Nations, 

 see " The Life and Times of Eed Jacket — Sago-ye-wat-ha, being the 

 sequel to the History of the Six jNTations," by Col. William L. Stone, 

 1841, and the "League of the Hode-no-san-nec, or Iroquois," by Lewis 

 A. Morgan, Eoch ester, 1851. 



MO-HEE-CON-NEU, OR ''MO-HE-GAK," THE GOOD CAKOE- 



MEK. 



[Stockbridge : Laws of the United States. Stockbridge : Indian Bureau, June, 1885.] 



Numbers 400 or 500 ; formerly of Massachusetts ; a band of the famous tribe of Pe- 

 quots: now semi-civilized. 



Mr. Catlin was with these Indians in 1830 at New Stockbridge and 

 Brotherton, in Western New York. They were subsequently removed 

 to Wisconsin. (See below.) 



272. Ee-to"W-o-kauin, Both Sides of the River ; chief of the tribe, with a psalm-book 



in one hand and a cane in the other. Christianized. Painted in 1831. 

 (Plate No. 199, page 102, vol. 2, Catliu's Eight Years.) 

 The chief of this tribe, Ee-tow-o-kaum (Both Sides of the River, No. 272), is a very 

 shrewd and intelligent man, and a professed, and I think sincere Christian. 



273. 'Waun-naw-con, The Dish (John W. Quinney); missionary preaclier. Civil- 



ized. Painted in 1830. 



(Plate No. 200, page 102, vol. 2, Catlin's Eight Years.) 

 Waun-naw-con (The Dish), John W. Quinney, in civilized dress, is a civilized Indian, 

 well educated, speaking good English, is a Baptist missionary preacher, and a very 

 plausible and eloquent speaker. 



ME. catlin's NOTES ON THE MO-HE- CON-NEUH, OR MOHEGAN INDIANS. 



There are 400 of this once powerful and still famous tribe residing near Green Bay, 

 on a rich tract of land given to them by the Government, in the Territory of Wiscon- 

 sin, near Winnebago Lake, on which they are living very comfortably, having 

 brought with them from their former country, in the State of Massachusetts, a knowl- 

 edge of agriculture, which they had there effectually learned and practiced. [Writ- 

 ten in 1848.] 



This tribe are the remains and all that are left of the once powerful and celebrated 

 tribe of Pequots of Massachusetts. History tells us that in their wars and dissen- 

 sions -with the whites a considerable portion of the tribe moved off under the com- 



