NAMES AND LOCATIONS OF INDIANS LN THE UNITED 



STATES. 



1820—1886. 



The Annual Eeport of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs for each 

 year contains the names and locations of the several Indian tribes in 

 the United States, with their population. The names have been cor- 

 rected by Maj. J. W. Powell, United States Geologist and Chief of the 

 Bureau of Ethnology. For the purpose of showing the changes in 

 names and locations of the several tril es since 1820 the following tables 

 from several reports are given. The first is from the report of Eev. 

 Jedidiah Morse, made in 1822. Prior to this report Lewis and Clark, 

 in their work, 1812-'13, gave a list of the tribes they met, as did other 

 explorers, traders, and hunters, but these were generally partial and 

 incomplete. H. R. Schoolcraft's tables are not given; they are but 

 partial at best. 



A statistical table of all the Indian tribes within the limits of the United States, including 

 a few bordering on our north and south boundaries related to or intermingling with them, 

 exhibiting their names, the number of souls in each tribe, the places of their residence, 

 with references to the map and to the pages of this ivork, pointing to the places of residence 

 of each tribe, on the one, and to the pages in the other, where they are described. 



[From report of Kev. Jedidiah Morse, U. S. Indian Commissioner.] 



INDIAN TRIBES OF THE UNITED STATES. 



1822. 





a 



o 





Names of the tribes. 



CD 



"3 



o 



CO 



O 

 u 



(U 



fit 



a 



a 



Page in re- 

 port and ap- 

 pendix 

 where each 



tribe is 

 described. 



Places of residence and remarks. 



a 



o 



ft 



CD 









CD 



9 



■ 1 



2 

 3 



f 4 



St. Johns Indians 



Passamaquoddies 



300 



379 



277 



320 



40 



340 



50 



420 



300 



50 

 50 







64 



65 

 65 



68 



68 

 68 

 68 



73 



74 



75 

 75 



On St. John's Eiver, Meductic Point, 60 m. 

 above Fredericktown, in N. Brunswick. 

 Supposed to be a mixture of the Esquimaux 

 with other Indians and white people, prin- 

 cipally French. 



Pleasant Point, on Scodic Eiver, town of 

 Perry, 5 m. N. of East Port. 



1 



S 





above Bangor. 

 At Marshpee, 78 m. S. E. Boston, Barnstable 



Co. 

 At Sandwich, 14 m . from Marshpee. 

 Island on tbe S. coast of Mass., S. E. of Boston. 

 In Troy, 50 m. S. Boston, Bristol Co. 



%l 5 



• f 9 

 ill. 



Herring Pond 



Martha's Vineyard *. . 

 Troy 















London and Norwich, on Thames Eiver. 







In Groton" adjoining Stonington. 





Total in New England 





2,526 





* The nuniberg fa tb,PS0 tribes arc conjectural, no particular account of them having been received.. 



