INDEX TO CATLIN GALLEKY. 



937 



Tall Peter, Ha-no-ja-cya — a Seneca. His biogra- 

 phy also given as Wa-o-no-jah-jah, He has 

 swallowed a tooth, 164. 



Ta-pa-ta-me, Sophia, "Wisdom, White Cloud's 

 daughter, an Iowa, mentioned, 143. 



Tap-pahge, Pawnee, 68. 



Tattoo marks with gunpowder and vermillion (No. 

 96), 64. 



Ta-wah-que-nah, The Mountain of Rocks, second 

 chief of the Comanches and the largest man in 

 the nation, with a beard (No. 47), 47. 



Ta-wa-que-nah, or Rocky Mountains, near Co- 

 manche village, 1834 (No. 352), 259. 



Taylor, General Zachary, mentioned, 24. 



Taylor, Hon. N. G-., Commissioner of Indian 

 Affairs, his table of tribes and locations, 1867, 898. 



Tcha-aes-ka-ding, boy four years old, Blackfeet 

 (No. 159), 103. 



Tcha-des-sa-ko-mah-pee, The Bear's Child, Black- 

 feet (No. 157), 103. 



Tcba-kauks-o-ko-maugh, The Great Chief, Me- 

 nomonee (No. 225), 133. 



Tchau-dee, Tobacco, second chief of the nation of 

 the Oglala (Ogalalla) Band of Sioux, Upper Mis- 

 souri (No. 71), 54. 



Tcha-to-ga, Mad Buffalo, Osage, a pardoned mur- 

 derer ; how considered by the tribe (No. 41), 44. 



Tchong-tas-sab-bee, The Black Dog, second chief 

 of the Osage, description and biography, his 

 prowess (No. 31), 42, 43. 



Tch6n-su-mons-ka, The Sand Bar, a Teton Sioux 

 woman, her dress and hair (No. 89), 57. 



Tehow-ee-put-o-kaw, a woman, Creek (No. 292), 

 210. 



Tchung-kee, game of, an athletic game, Mandans, 

 1832 (No. 431), 304. 



Te-ah-ke-ra-lee-re-coo, The Chayenne (Cheyenne) 

 Republican Pawnee (No. 107), 68. 



Tecumseh's plans for an Indian confederacy, 202. 



Tecumthe, his death, manner of, 129. 



Teh-ke-neh-kee, The Black Coat, a chief, Cherokee 

 (No. 286), 207. 



Teh-t6ot-sah, first chief of the Kio was (No. 62), 51 . 



Teller, Hon. H. M., Secretary of the Interior, men- 

 tioned, 21. 



Tel-maz-ha-za, a warrior, Creek (No. 293), 210. 



Tents and lodges, Indian, manner of striking and 

 transporting, 409. 



Ten-squat-a-way, The Open Door, Shawnee 

 prophet, brother of Tecumseh (No. 279), 201. 



Te-okun-ko, The Swift, Sioux (No. 94), 58. 



Theorist, Mr. Catlin as a speculative one, as to 

 the American Indian, 748. 



Thieving among the Osages, honored if not de- 

 tected, 45. 



Thunders' Nest, The Nid du Tonnerre, 1836 (No. 

 478), 337. 



Times, London, subscription to, by an Iowa In- 

 dian, 1845, 657. 



Tis-se-woo-na-tis. She who bathes her knees, wife 

 of No. 143, her dress (No. 144), 89. 



Tobacco, sacrifice of, by Iowas at London, 1845, 

 627. 



Toh-ki-e-to, The Stone with horns, chief of the 

 Yankton Sioux, his dress and affectation, as an 

 orator (No. 82), 56. 



T6hto-wah-k6n-da-pee, The Blue Medicine, Sioux, 

 a medicine man (No. 73), 55. 



Toltecs, the Crows are, Hum I oldt's view of, 758. 



Torture among the Sioux, 540. 



Tournament, a sham' fight by Comanches, 1834 

 (No. 480), 337. 



Tower of London, Indians' visit to, Iowas', 1845, 636. 

 The Short, Wisconsin, 1835 ( No. 359), 261. 

 on the Upper Missouri, 1,100 miles 

 above Saint Louis (No. 378), 271. 



Trade with Indians, its evils, 488. 



the Indians of the United States, his- 

 tory of, 809. 



Tradition of the Mandans as to the red pipe- 

 stone quarry, 252. 



Traditions of the Choctaws, 213. 



Indians as to the red pipe-stone 



quarry, 248, 252. 

 Sioux as to the Thunders' Nest 

 (No. 478), 337. 



Training-schools, Indian, expenses of, and attend- 

 ance, 1886, 825. 



Treaties, Indian, reference to all, 829. , 



Tribal funds, securities invested for, reference to, 



829. 

 Tribes of Indians in the United States, and loca- 

 tion, 1822, 884. 

 1832, 894. 

 1867, 898. 

 1886, 902. 

 Indian, represented in J. M. Stanley's col- 

 lection, 798. 

 list of, in the United States, 1886, 821. 

 the five civilized, in Indian Territory, 

 Commissioner Atkins as to, 1880, 863. 

 land holdings of, 866. 

 Trust funds and trust lands, Indian (see reference 



to), 829. 

 Tuch-ee, Dutch, first war chief of the Cherokees, 



biography of, great warrior (No. 284), 206. 

 Tul-lock-chish-ko, He who drinks the juice of the 



stone, Choctaw (Nos. 298, 299), 212. 

 Tunk-aht-6h-ye, The Thunder, a boy (No. 66), 52. 

 Tunnel, the Thames, visit to, by Ioways, London, 



1845, 637. 

 Turner, Doctor, of Lecompton, Iowa, despoils 



Black Hawk's grave, 29. 

 Tuscarora vocabulary, 551. 

 Tuscaroras (see Tuskaroras), 177. 

 Tus-ka-ro-ra, Tuscarora (Iroquois, Six Nations) 

 177, portrait of (No. 271), 177. 

 location and numbers, 1885-'86, 178. 

 notes on, 178. 

 Tuttle, Rev. E. B., referred to, 156. 

 Two Comanche girls, sisters, showing the wigwam, 

 of the chief, his dogs, and his five children (Nos. 

 53, 54), 48. 

 Two guns, Daniel and Henry, Senecas, mentioned, 



158. 

 Tyler, John, President of the United States, con- 

 fers a medal on Little Wolf, Iowa, 146. 



U. 



Union, Fort, in 1832, 432. 



notes on (No. 388), 274-276. 

 United States and England, essential differences 



between, Mr. Catlin's view, 1844, 660. 

 U'n-ka hah-h6n-shee-kow, The Long Fingernails, 



Mandan (No. 135), 82. 

 U'-sh-ee-kitz, He who fights with a feather, Wee- 



co chief (No. 68), 53. 



V. 



Vanity of a Mandan about his portrait, 82. 

 and egotism of a Sioux Indian, 57. 

 Vatteniare, Monsieur A., mentioned, 661. 

 Vernacular, the Western, 506. 

 Victoria, Queen, sends a present to the Chippe- 



was, 1844, 587. 

 View on the Canadian River, 1834 (No. 344), 257. 

 Views of the junction of Red River with the Fals* 

 Washita, 1834 (No. 345), 257. 

 on the Saint Peter's River, twenty milesabove 

 Fort Snellins:, 

 painted in 1836 

 (No. 340), 254. 

 Sioux pursuing a 

 stag in their ca- 

 noes, painted in 

 1836 (No. 341), 

 254. 

 on the Wisconsin, 1836, Winnebagoes shoot- 

 ing ducks in bark canoes No. 347), 257. 

 Village of the Mandans (No. 379), <s71. 



Prairie Dogs, 321. 

 Virtue the rule among the Mandans, 83. 

 Vocabularies, Blackfoot, Mandan, Riccaree, Sioux, 



Tuscarora, 551. 

 Voyage up the Missouri and Yellowstone Rivers, 

 1832, 426. 



W. 



Wa-a-pa-shaw (see Wa-be-shaw), (No. 90), 57. 

 Wa-be-shaw, The Leaf, head chief of the Keoxa 



Sioux, an illustration of his power (No. 90), i7, 58. 

 Wabeshaw, the Sioux chief, saves Prairie du 



Chien from sacking by the Winnebagoes, 58. 



