﻿[52 
  NEW 
  YORK 
  STATE 
  MUSEUM 
  

  

  Te-ka-jik-ha'-do, 
  place 
  of 
  salt, 
  is 
  Morgan's 
  name 
  for 
  Salina. 
  

  

  Te-ka'-ne-a-da'-he, 
  take 
  on 
  a 
  hill, 
  is 
  his 
  name 
  for 
  Tully 
  and 
  its 
  

   lakes. 
  

  

  "Te-kanea-ta-heung-ne-ugh 
  — 
  Very 
  high 
  hills, 
  with 
  many 
  small 
  

   lakes, 
  from 
  which 
  water 
  flows 
  in 
  contrary 
  directions. 
  It 
  implies, 
  

   also, 
  an 
  excellent 
  hunting 
  ground." 
  Clark 
  applied 
  this 
  to 
  Fabius, 
  

   Tnlly, 
  Truxton, 
  etc., 
  but 
  included 
  too 
  much 
  in 
  his 
  definition. 
  For 
  

   these 
  lakes 
  as 
  a 
  group 
  A. 
  Cusick 
  gave 
  the 
  name 
  of 
  T'ka-ne-a-da- 
  

   her-neuh, 
  many 
  lakes 
  on 
  a 
  hill. 
  These 
  ponds 
  have 
  several 
  legends, 
  

   but 
  without 
  relation 
  to 
  the 
  name. 
  

  

  Te-ka'-wis-to'-ta, 
  tinned 
  dome, 
  is 
  Morgan's 
  name 
  for 
  the 
  village 
  

   of 
  Lafayette. 
  

  

  Te-o-ha'-ha-hen'-wha 
  turnpike 
  crossing 
  the 
  valley 
  is 
  his 
  name 
  

   for 
  Onondaga 
  Valley. 
  Clark 
  gave 
  it 
  as 
  "Teuaheughwa 
  — 
  where 
  the 
  

   path 
  crosses 
  the 
  road." 
  A. 
  Cusick 
  called 
  it 
  Tu-ha-han'-wah, 
  to 
  the 
  

   crossing 
  road, 
  i. 
  e. 
  in 
  going 
  from 
  the 
  reservation 
  to 
  the 
  road 
  leading 
  

   west. 
  

  

  Te-thir'-o-quen 
  and 
  Tsi-ro-qui 
  were 
  French 
  forms 
  of 
  early 
  names 
  

   of 
  Oneida 
  lake 
  and 
  outlet, 
  referring 
  to 
  something 
  white. 
  The 
  first 
  

   name 
  is 
  in 
  the 
  Relation 
  of 
  1656, 
  but 
  afterward 
  had 
  many 
  variations. 
  

   On 
  the 
  Jesuit 
  map 
  of 
  1665 
  appears 
  Lac 
  Techiroquen. 
  Greenhalgh 
  

   wrote 
  it 
  Teshiroque 
  in 
  1677. 
  In 
  1728 
  the 
  French 
  spoke 
  of 
  "the 
  

   Lake 
  of 
  Thecheweguen, 
  or 
  of 
  the 
  Oneidas." 
  

  

  Teu-nen'-to, 
  at 
  the 
  cedars, 
  is 
  A. 
  Cusick's 
  name 
  for 
  Cross 
  lake. 
  

   Others 
  will 
  follow 
  from 
  various 
  sources. 
  

  

  Te-ungt'-too, 
  residence 
  of 
  the 
  wise 
  man, 
  is 
  the 
  name 
  of 
  this 
  lake 
  

   according 
  to 
  Clark. 
  He 
  added 
  : 
  "There 
  is 
  a 
  singular 
  tradition 
  alive, 
  

   among 
  the 
  Onondagas, 
  respecting 
  an 
  aged 
  and 
  very 
  wise 
  chief, 
  who 
  

   lived 
  on 
  the 
  eastern 
  shore 
  of 
  this 
  lake 
  many 
  hundred 
  years 
  ago. 
  

   His 
  name 
  was 
  Hiawatha." 
  Clark 
  first 
  gave 
  this 
  legend 
  in 
  an 
  ex- 
  

   tended 
  form. 
  Hiawatha 
  was 
  at 
  first 
  an 
  Onondaga 
  chief, 
  but 
  was 
  

   adopted 
  by 
  the 
  Mohawks, 
  among 
  whom 
  his 
  successors 
  yet 
  rule. 
  

   Teonto 
  was 
  Schoolcraft's 
  name 
  for 
  this 
  lake. 
  According 
  to 
  the 
  

   ( 
  )nondagas 
  in 
  1752 
  it 
  was 
  Och-schu-go-re 
  who 
  founded 
  the 
  fishery 
  

   near 
  the 
  lake. 
  

  

  Teu-nea-yahs-go'-na, 
  place 
  of 
  big 
  stones. 
  Geddes. 
  

  

  Te-u-swen-ki-en'-took, 
  board 
  hanging 
  dowfi. 
  Castle 
  hotel 
  on 
  

   reservation 
  line. 
  

  

  