928 



INDEX 



Speck, Frank G., on weapons, 573, 574, 

 578, 579, 582, 586. 

 on Yuchi sewing, 454. 

 Spelman, Henry, 274, 276, 305, 831. 



on agricultural methods, 304, 306, 



307. 

 on burial customs, 719. 

 on crime and punishment, 730. 

 on games, 675. 

 on hair dressing, 498, 501. 

 on home manners, 711. 

 on houses, 414. 

 on hunting, 318, 320. 

 on marriage customs, 701, 702. 

 on medical practices, 783, 784. 

 on names, 671. 

 on religious beliefs and usages, 



743, 747. 

 on social organization, 642. 

 on tomahawks, primitive type, 



568, 588. 

 on war customs, 688. 

 Spier, Leslie, 666, 669. 



on the Crow system of relationship, 

 666. 

 Spinden, Herbert J., 11. 

 Spiritu Santo harbor. Mobile reported 



by Calder6n on island near, 151. 

 Spoehr, Alexander, 828. 

 Spokogi, ceremonial name for Tukabah- 



chee, 185. 

 Spoonbill {Polyodon spatula), use as 



food 266, 267. 

 Spotswood, Governor, 131, 178, 201. 

 removal of Eno with Cheraw and 

 Keyauwee to frontiers of North 

 Carolina proposed by, 131. 

 Saponi removed to Fort Christanna, 

 Va., by, 178. 

 Sprague, Andrew, Tutelo vocabulary 



collected from, 201. 

 Spring Gardens, 30. 

 Square Ground, Atasi Indians, 616. 



established by Tukabahchee in 

 southeastern part of Creek terri- 

 tory in Okla., 197. 

 given up by Sawokli to join Hitchiti, 



180. 

 known as Thliwahali ground, 133. 

 Lower Eufaula, long given up, 132. 

 maintained by Chiaha among Sem- 

 inole, 116. 



Hilibi near Hanna, Okla., 137. 

 Mikasuki in the Seminole Na- 

 tion, 150. 

 Natchez in Greenleaf Mt., 160. 

 Okchai in Okla., 167. 

 Pakana in Okla., 170. 

 Tukabahchee at Yeager near 



Holdenville, 197. 

 Yuchi in Okla., 214. 

 reestablished by Okchai near Hanna, 

 Okla., 167. 



Okmulgee in northeast of Creek 

 territory, 168. 

 Square Grounds, Creek ones illus- 

 trated, 776. 



Squash (Cucurbita verrucosa), use of, 



635. 

 Squirrel King, Chickasaw chief, 73, 117, 



118. 

 Stanley, John Mix, painting of inter- 

 tribal Indian council by, 81. 

 Starkville, 106. 



Starritt, Preston, information on Chero- 

 kee festivals obtained from, 769-771. 

 Staunton River, site of Indian town, 157. 

 Steatite, use of, 243. 

 Stegaraki, branch of Mannahoac, 219. 

 interpretation of name, 219. 

 See Stuckanox. 

 Stekoa Creek, 47. 

 Stephen's Bluff, 51. 

 Stewart County, Ga., site of Kolomi 



settlement, 146. 

 Stiggins, George, Tawasa chronicler, 

 191, 828. 

 estimate of Alabama population by, 



88. 

 on marriage customs, 704, 705. 

 on moral characteristics among 



Creeks, 230. 

 on possession of brass drum by 



Abihka, 81. 

 on war club, 568, 569. 

 Stimafutchki, or "Good Humor," Koa- 



sati chief, 146. 

 Stockade, establishment of, by Spanish 



in Apalachicola village, 1689, 63. 

 Stockaded town, probably Tocar, 65, 

 Stockades, 433-439, 804. 

 Stokes Ferry, 41. 



Stone, sources of raw material, 541-543. 

 pipes, 545-547. 

 uses of, 243, 541-549. 

 Stone People, see Avoyel. 

 Stono, fought with Coosa against South 



Carolina colonists, 129. 

 Stools, wooden, 555-556. 

 Strachey, William, 218, 278, 299, 304, 

 305, 317, 325, 330, 335, 346, 427, 428, 

 430, 440, 441, 442, 448, 456, 813, 831. 

 on age of Powhatan Indians' settle- 

 ment in North Carolina, 24. 

 on agricultural methods, 307. 

 on artistic development, 614, 615. 

 on birth customs and treatment of 



young, 709, 710. 

 on burial customs, 719. 

 on clothing, 459, 462, 469, 470, 472, 

 473, 475. 



worn by medicine men, 477, 

 478. 

 on cooking, 351, 352, 355, 356, 360, 



363,370,371,372. 

 on copper mines at Ritanoe, 492, 



493. 

 on crime and punishment, 730. 

 on ear ornaments, 510, 511. 

 on fate of Roanoke colonists, 76. 

 on fishing, 336, 338, 339. 

 on food, 274, 275, 276. 

 on food preserving, 377, 379, 380. 

 on games, 674, 675, 685. 



