886 THE GEORGE CATLIN INDIAN GALLERY. 



A statistical table of Indian tribes of the United Males in 1822, $c— Continued. 



35 



:i6 



6 -\ 



2 

 -r 



121 



42 



Names of the tribes. 



Delawares, Munsees, 

 Moheakunnuks, 

 and Nanticokes. 



Pottawattamies 



Chippewas 



Menominees 



Peorias, Kaskaskias 

 and Cahokias. 



Kickapoos 



Miamies, Weas, and 

 Eel River Indians. 



Sauks of the Missis- 

 sippi. 



Foxes 



Ioways 



Kickapoos , 



Total in Indiana and 

 Illinois. 



Nottaways, Pamun- 



keys, & Mattaonies. 



Catawbas 



Seminoles & other 

 remnants of tribes 

 in Florida. 



1,700 



3,400 



500 



270 

 36 



400 



1,400 



4,500 



2,000 

 1,000 



17, 006 



27 



20 



450 



5,000 



5,497 



Page in re- 

 port and ap- 

 pendix 

 where each 



tribe is 

 described. 



29 



29 



29 



29 



33 





108 



119 to 

 140 



119 & 

 109 



120 to 

 140 



120 to 

 140 

 204 



M 



147 



Places of residence and remarks. 



On White River, in Indiana, in 5 villages, in 

 a compass of 36 miles. This was their 

 state in 1816. Since, their lands have all 

 been sold, and these Indians are scattered, 

 none can tell where. 



Scattered in villages in the vicinity of Chi- 

 cago, in the northern part of Indiana, on 

 the S. shore of Michigan Lake, and S. near 

 the center of Indiana. 



Scattered in several villages among the Pot- 

 tawattamies. 



On Illinois River. 



Once inhabited a large part of Illinois and 

 Indiana. In the war kindled againsUthese 

 tribes by the Sauks and Foxes, in revenge 

 for the death of their chief, Pontiac, these 

 3 tribes were nearly exterminated. Few 

 of them now remain. About one hundred 

 of the Peorias are settled on Current River, 

 W. of the Mississippi. Of the Kaskaskias, 

 36 only remain in Illinois. 



About the center of Illinois. They have sold 

 all their lands and are about to remove over 

 the Mississippi. 



At Mississippi, about the center of Indiana 

 from ST. to S. The "Weas and Eel riv. In- 

 dians are different bands of the Miamies 



On both sides of the Mississippi from Illi- 

 nois River to the Ouisconsin. Their hunt- 

 ing grounds, N. of Mandan. 



Mingled with the Sauks in the same terri- 

 tory. 



These Indians are mingled with the tribes 

 last mentioned. Their principal villages 

 are on the Ioway and La Moines Rivera 

 the greater part W. of the Mississippi. 



About this number of the tribe are on the 

 territories they have lately sold, or settling 

 themselves on their new lands east of the 

 Great Osages. 



In Southampton co. S. E. part of Virginia; 



W. side of Nottawoy River. 

 On Catawba River in S. and N. Carolina. 



The places where these Indians dwell are 

 stated in Capt. Bell's letter, quoted in Ap- 

 pendix, p. 303. 



(The following is the account given of these Indians by Capt. Young, taken from his MS. Journal. 



reckoned in the footing.) 



Not 



Micasukeys 



Fowl Towns... 

 Oka-tiokinans . 



lichees 



Ehawho-ka-les . 



Tamatles . . 

 Attapulgas 



Telmocresses . . 

 Cheskitalowas 

 Wekivas 



1,400 



300 

 580 

 130 

 150 



220 



220 

 220 



100 

 580 

 250 



















.... 





















30 miles NNE. from Fort St. Mark, on a 

 pond 14 miles long, 2 or 3 wide— land fertile, 

 and of a beautiful aspect. 



12 miles E. Fort Scott— land tolerable. 



Near Fort G-aines. 



Near the Mikasukey. 



On Apalachicola, 12 miles below Ocheese 

 Bluff. 



At the bluff of their name. 



7 miles above the Ocheeses. 



On Little River, a branch Okalokina, 15 miles 

 above the Mikasukey path from Fort Gads- 

 den — fine body of lands. 



W. side of Chatahoochee, 15 miles above the 

 fork — sood land. 



On the W. side of Chattahoochee, two miles 

 above the line. 



4 miles above the Cheskitalowas. 



