THE GEORGE CATLIN INDIAN GALLEKY. 



889 



A statistical table of Indian tribes of the United States in 1822, ^c— Continued. 



a 

 B 

 o 





Names of the tribes. 



o 



<n 



O 



U 



<D 



a 



Page in re- 

 port and ap- 

 pendix 



where each 

 tribe is 



described. 



Places of residence and remarks. 



6 



i 



4^ 



5 



M 



id 



Ph-3 



«4 





f l 



Chinnook Indians 



1, 700 



1,300 

 1,400 

 1,200 



600 



400 



1,200 



2,400 



700 



1,100 

 400 



500 



1,800 



500 



20, 000 



900 

 900 



600 



900 



600 



1,200 







12 m. from the mouth of Columbia River, N. 



side. 

 2 Do. S. side. 

 40 do. N. of Columbia River. 

 40 do. S. of do. along the coast of the Pacific 



Ocean. 

 30 do. from the mouth of Columbia River. 

 Opposite the Cathlamats. 

 39 m. from the mouth of Columbia River, S. 



side. 

 On Columbia River 62 m. from its mouth ; 



they dwell in 3 villages on a N. creek of it, 



called the Cowlitsick, 200 yards wide, rapid, 



boatable 190 miles. 





2 

 3 



4 



5 

 6 



7 



8 



9 



10 

 11 



12 



13 

 14 

 15 



16 

 17 



18 



19 



20 

 21 



22 

 23 



24 

 25 

 26 



27 

 28 









































Hell wits (part of the 

 tribe). 



Cowlitsick (in 3 vil- 

 lages). 



Cathlakamaps 



Cathjapootle 

























the mouth of the Wallaumut (called, incor- 

 rectly, Multnomah), S. branch of Columbia 

 River. 

 Opposite the Cathlakamaps, on Columbia 

 River. 





Cathlanamenamens. . . 



Mathlanobs (errone- 

 ously called Mult- 

 no mahs). 



Cathlapooy as 













once very powerful under the famous chief 

 Toteleham. 

 At the upper end of the island above named, 

 in the mouth of the Wallaumut. The main 

 channel of the "Wallaumut is here 500 yards 

 wide. 



CO 



a 

 1 







o 



Cathlathlas 







side. 

 60 m. from the mouth of the Wallaumut, on 

 the E. side. 



>> 



Shoshones 







M 



o 

 o 

 H 



o 



Cathlakahikits 



Cathlathlas 







this name. They inhabit the banks of this 

 fine crooked river, boatable above five hun- 

 dred miles. 

 ( At the rapids of Columbia River, the former 



«M | 







< on the N. the latter on the S. side, 160 miles 



o 



+3 



Chippanchickchicks . . 

 Cathlaskos 







( from its mouth. 



to 







rows, a little below the falls, 220 miles from 

 its mouth. 

 On Columbia River opposite the above. 



42 



Ithkyemamits 



Hellwits (part of the 



tribe. 

 "Wollawalla 







B 









5 











Shoshonees 



60, 000 



400 

 2,000 

 1,600 



800 

 250 







They occupy all the country between the 

 southern branches of Lewis's River, ex- 

 tending from the Cmatullum to the E. side 

 of the Stony Mountains, on the southern 

 parts of Wailaumut River, from about 40° 

 to 47° N". lat. A branch of this tribe of 4 

 or 5,000 reside, in the spring and summer, 

 on the W. fork of Lewis River, a branch of 

 the Columbia, and in winter and fall, on the 

 Missouri. 



Reside in spring and summer in the Rocky 

 Mountains on Clarke's River ; winter and 

 faHt on the Missouri and its waters. 



Residing on the Kooskooskee River below the 

 forks, and on Cotter's Creek, and who some- 

 times pass over to the Missouri. 



H 



Ootlashoot 





Chopunnish 









Pelloatpallah, band of 

 Chopunnish. 



Kimmooenim, do 



Yeletpoo, do 













forks, and on the small streams which fall 

 into that river W. of the Rocky Mountains 

 and Chopunnish River, and sometimes pass 

 over to the Missouri. 









the Kooskooskee, as high up as the forks. 











river called Weancum, which falls into 

 Lewis River above the entrance of the 

 Kooskooskee. 



