North American Indians

From LoveToKnow 1911

NORTH AMERICAN. INDIANS The name of " American Indians " for the aborigines of America had its origin in the use by Columbus, in a letter (February 1493) written "Ameri- soon after the discovery of the New World, of the term Indios (i.e. natives of India) for the hitherto unknown human beings, some of whom he brought back to Europe with him. He believed, as did the people of his age in general, that the islands which he had discovered by sailing westward across the Atlantic were actually a part of India, a mistaken idea which later served to suggest many absurd theories of the origin of the aborigines, their customs, languages, culture, &c. From Spanish the word, with its incorrect connotation, passed into French (Indien), Italian and Portuguese (Indio), German (Indianer), Dutch (Indiane), &c. When the New World came to be known as America, the natives received, in English especially, the name " American Indians," to distinguish them from the " Indians " of south-eastern Asia and the East Indies. The appellation " Americans " was for a long time used in English to designate, not the European colonists, but the aborigines, and when, in 1891, Dr D. G. Brinton published his notable monograph on the Indians he entitled it The American Race, recalling the early employment of the term. The awkwardness of such a term as " American Indian," both historically and linguistically, led Major J. W. Powell, the founder of the Bureau of American Ethnology, to put forward as a substitute " Amerind," an arbitrary curtailment which had the advantage of lending itself easily to form words necessary and useful in ethnological writings, e.g. pre-Amerind, post-Amerind, pseudo-Amerind, Amerindish, Amerindize, &c. Purists have objected strenuously to " Amerind," but the word already has a certain vogue in both English and French. Indeed, Professor A. H. Keane does not hesitate, in The World's Peoples (London, 1908), to use " Amerinds " in lieu of " American Indians." Other popular terms for the American Indians, which have more or less currency, are " Red race," " Red men," " Redskins," the last not in such good repute as the corresponding German Rothdute, or French Peaux-rouges, which have scientific standing. The term " American Indians " covers all the aborigines of the New World past and present, so far as is known, although some European writers, especially in France, still seek to separate from the " Redskins " the Aztecs, Mayas, Peruvians, &c., and some American authorities would (anatomically at least) rank the Eskimo as distinct from the Indian proper. When the name " Indian " came to be used by the European colonists and their descendants, they did not confine it to " wild men," but applied it to many things that were wild, strange, nonEuropean in the new environment (see Journ. Amer. Folk-Lore, 1902, pp. 107-116; Handbook of Amer. Inds., 1907, pt. i. pp. 605-607). Thus more than one hundred popular names of plants in use in American English (e.g. " Indian corn," " Indian pink," &c.) contain references to the Indian in this way; also many other things, such as " Indian file," " Indian ladder," " Indian gift," " Indian pudding," " Indian summer." The CanadianFrench, who termed the Indian sauvage (i.e. " savage "), remembered him linguistically in botte sauvage (moccasin), traine sauvage (toboggan). The term " Siwash," in use in the Chinook jargon of the North Pacific coast, and also in the English of that region, for " Indian "is merely a corruption of this CanadianFrench appellation. In the literature relating to the Pacific coast there is mention even of " Siwash Indians." Throughout Canada and the United States the term " Indian " occurs in hundreds of place-names of all sorts (" Indian River," " Indian Head," " Indian Bay," " Indian Hill," and the like). There are besides these Indiana and its capital Indianapolis. In Newfoundland " Red Indian," as the special term for the Beothuks, forms part of a number of place-names. Pope's characterization of the American aborigine, " Lo! the poor Indian, whose untutor'd mind Sees God in clouds, or hears Him in the wind," is responsible for the creation in the mind of the people of a Mr Lo," who figures in newspaper lore, cartoons, &c. The reputations, deserved and undeserved, of certain Indian tribes north of Mexico have been such that their names have passed into English or into the languages of other civilized nations of Europe as synonyms for " ruffian," " thug," " rowdy," &c. Recently " les Apaches " have been the terror of certain districts of Paris, as were the " Mohocks " (Mohawks) for certain parts of London toward the close of the 18th century.

The North American Indians have been the subject of numerous popular fallacies, some of which have gained world-wide currency. Here belongs a mass of pseudo-scientific and thoroughly unscientific literature embodying absurd and extravagant theories and speculations as to the origin of the aborigines and their " civilizations "which derive them (in most extraordinary ways sometimes), in recent or in remote antiquity, from all regions of the Old World - Egypt and Carthage, Phoenicia and Canaan, Asia Minor and the Caucasus, Assyria and Babylonia, Persia and India, Central Asia and Siberia, China and Tibet, Korea, Japan, the East Indies, Polynesia, Greece and ancient Celtic Europe and even medieval Ireland and Wales. Favourite theories of this sort have made the North American aborigines the descendants of refugees from sunken Atlantis, Tatar warriors, Malayo-Polynesian sea-farers, Hittite immigrants from Syria, the " Lost Ten Tribes of Israel," &c., or attributed their social, religious and political ideas and institutions to the advent of stray junks from Japan, Buddhist votaries from south-eastern Asia, missionaries from early Christian Europe, Norse vikings, Basque fishermen and the like.

Particularly interesting are the theories of " Welsh (or white) Indians " and the " Lost Ten Tribes." The myth of the " Welsh Indians," reputed to be the descendants of a colony founded about A.D. 1170 by Prince Madoc (well known from Southey's poem), has been studied by James Mooney (Amer. Anthrop. iv., 1891, 393-394), who traces its development from statements in an article in The Turkish Spy, published in London about 1730. At first these " Welsh Indians," who are subsequently described as speaking Welsh, possessing Welsh Bibles, beads, crucifixes, &c., are placed near the Atlantic coast and identified with the Tuscaroras, an Iroquoian tribe, but by 1776 they had retreated inland to the banks of the Missouri above St Louis. A few years later they were far up the Red river, continuing, as time went on, to recede farther and farther westward, being identified successively with the Mandans, in whose language Catlin thought he detected a Welsh element, the Mogul., a Pueblos tribe of north-eastern Arizona, and the Modocs (here the name was believed to re-echo Madoc) of south-western Oregon, until at last they vanished over the waters of the Pacific Ocean. The theory that the American Indians were the " Lost Ten Tribes of Israel " has not yet entirely disappeared from ethnological literature. Many of the identities and resemblances in ideas, customs and institutions between the American Indians and the ancient Hebrews, half-knowledge or distorted views of which formed the basis of the theory, are discussed, and their real significance pointed out by Colonel Garrick Mallery in his valuable address on " Israelite and Indian: A Parallel in Planes of Culture " (Proc. Amer. Assoc. Adv. Sci. vol. xxxviii., 1889, pp. 287-331). The whole subject has been discussed by Professor H. W. Henshaw in his " Popular Fallacies respecting the Indians " (Amer. Anthrop. vol. vii. n.s., 1905, pp. 104-113).

Of ways of classifying the races of mankind and their subdivisions the number is great, but that which measures them by their speech is both ancient and convenient. The multiplicity of languages among the American Indians was one of the first things that struck the earliest investigators of a scientific turn of mind, no less than the missionaries who preceded them. The Abbe Hervas, the first serious student of the primitive tongues of the New World, from the classificatory point of view, noted this multiplicity of languages in his Catalogo delle lingue conosciute e notizia della loro of nitet e diversit¢ (Cesena, 1784); and after him Balbi, Adelung and others. About the same time in America Thomas Jefferson, who besides being a statesman was also a considerable naturalist (see Amer. Anthrop. ix. n.s., 1907, 499-5 0 9), was impressed by the same fact, and in his Notes on the State of Virginia observed that for one " radical language " in Asia there would be found probably twenty in America. Jefferson himself collected and arranged (the MSS. were afterwards lost) the vocabularies of about fifty Indian languages and dialects, and so deserves rank among the forerunners of the modern American school of comparative philologists. After Jefferson came Albert Gallatin, who had been his secretary of the treasury, as a student of American Indian languages in the larger sense. He had also himself collected a number of Indian vocabularies. Gallatin's work is embodied in the well-known " Synopsis of the Indian Tribes within the United States East of the Rocky Mountains, and in the British and Russian Possessions in North America," published in the Transactions and Collections of the American Antiquarian Society (ii. 1-422) for 1836. In this, really the first attempt in America to classify on a linguistic basis the chief Indian tribes of the better-known regions of North America, Gallatin enumerated the following twenty-nine separate divisions: Adaize, Algonkin-Lenape, Athapascas, Atnas, Attacapas, Blackfeet, Caddoes, Catawbas, Chahtas, Cherokees, Chetimachas, Chinooks, Eskimaux, Fall Indians, Iroquois, Kinai, Koulischen, Muskhogee, Natches, Pawnees, Queen Charlotte's Island, Salish, Salmon River (Friendly Village), Shoshonees, Sioux, Straits of Fuca, Utchees, Wakash, Woccons. These do not all represent distinct linguistic stocks, as may be seen by comparison with the list given below; such peoples as the Caddo and Pawnee are now known to belong together, the Blackfeet are Algonkian, the Catawba Siouan, the Adaize Caddoan, the Natchez Muskogian, &c. But the monograph is a very good first attempt at classifying North American Indian languages.

Gallatin's coloured map of the distribution of the Indian tribes in question is also a pioneer piece of work. In 1840 George Bancroft, in the third volume of his History of the Colonization of the United States, discussed the Indian tribes east of the Mississippi, listing the following eight families: Algonquin, Catawba, Cherokee, Huron-Iroquois, Mobilian (Choctaw and Muskhogee), Natchez, Sioux or Dahcota, Uchee. He gives also linguistic map, modified somewhat from that of Gallatin. The next work of great importance in American comparative philology is Horatio Hale's monograph forming the sixth volume (Phila., 1846), Ethnography and Philology, of the publications of the " United States Exploring Expedition, during the years 1838, 1839, 1840, 1842, under the Command of Charles Wilkes, U.S. Navy," which added much to our knowledge of the languages of the Indians of the Pacific coast regions. Two years later Gallatin published in the second volume of the Transactions of the American Ethnological Society (New York) a monograph entitled " Hale's Indians of North-west America, and Vocabularies of North America," in which he recognized the following additional groups: Arrapahoes, Jakon, Kalapuya, Kitunaha, Lutuami, Palainih, Sahaptin, Saste, Waiilatpu. In 1853 he contributed a brief paper to the third volume of Schoolcraft's Information Respecting the History, Condition and Prospects of the Indian Tribes of the United States, adding to the "families" already recognized by him the following: Cumanches, Gros Ventres, Kaskaias, Kiaways, Natchitoches, Towiacks, Ugaljachmutzi. Some modifications in the original list were also made. During the period1853-1877many contributions to the classification of the Indian languages of North America, those of the west and the north-west in particular, were made by Gibbs, Latham, Turner, Buschmann, Hayden, Dall, Powers, Powell and Gatschet. The next important step, and the most scientific, was taken by Major J. W. Powell, who contributed to the Seventh Annual Report of the Bureau of Ethnology, 1885-1886 (Washington, 1891) his classic monograph (pp. 1-142) on " Indian Linguistic Families of America North of Mexico." In 1891 also appeared Dr D. G. Brinton's The American Race: A Linguistic Classification and Ethnographic Description of the Native Tribes of North and South America (New York, p. 392). With these two works the adoption of language as the means of distinction and classification of the American aborigines north of Mexico for scientific purposes became fixed. Powell, using the vocabulary as the test of relationship or difference, enumerated, in the area considered, 58 separate linguistic stocks, or families of speech, each " as distinct from one another in their vocabularies and apparently in their origin as from the Aryan or the Scythian families " (p. 26).

The 58 distinct linguistic stocks of American Indians north of Mexico, recognized by Powell, were as follows: (1) Adaizan; (2) Algonquian; (3) Athapascan; (4) Attacapan; (5) Beothukan; (6) Caddoan; (7) Chimakuan; (8) Chimarikan; (9) Chimmesyan; (io) Chinookan; (r1) Chitimachan; (12) Chumashan; (13) Coahuiltecan; (14) Copehan; (15) Costanoan; (16) Eskimauan; (r7) Esselenian; (18) Iroquoian; (iv) Kalapooian; (20) Karankawan; (21) Keresan; (22) Kiowan; (23) Kitunahan; (24) Koluschan; (25) Kulanapan; (26) Kusan; (27) Lutuamian; (28) Mariposan; (29) Moquelumnan; (30) Muskhogean; (31) Natchesan; (32) Palaihnihan; (33) Piman; (34) Pujunan; (35) Quoratean; (36) Salinan; (37) Salishan; (38) Sastean; (39) Shahaptian; (40) Shoshonean; (41) Siouan; (42) Skittagetan; (43) Takilman; (44) Tanoan; (45) Timuquanan; (46) Tonikan; (47) Tonkawan; (48) Uchean; (49) Waiilatpuan; (50) Wakashan; (51) Washoan; (52) Weitspekan; (53) Wishoskan; (54) Yakonan; (J5) Yanan; (56) Yukian; (S7) Yuman; (58) Zunian.

This has been the working-list of students of American Indian languages, but since its appearance the scientific investigations of Boas, Gatschet, Dorsey, Fletcher, Mooney, Hewitt, Hale, Morice, Henshaw, Hodge, Matthews, Kroeber, Dixon, Goddard, Swanton and others have added much to our knowledge, and not a few serious modifications of Powell's classification have resulted. With Powell's monograph was published a coloured map showing the distribution of all the linguistic stocks of Indians north of Mexico. Of this a revised edition accompanies the Handbook of American Indians North of Mexico, published by the Bureau of American Ethnology in 1907-1910, now the standard book of reference on the subject. The chief modifications made in Powell's list are as follows: The temporary presence in a portion of south-west Florida of a new stock, the Arawakan, is now proved. The Adaizan language has been shown to belong to the Caddoan family; the Natchez to the Muskogian; the Palaihnian to the Shastan; the Piman to the Shoshonian. The nomenclature of Powell's classification has never been completely satisfactory to American philologists, and a movement is now well under way (see Amer. Anthrop. vii. n.s., 1905, 579-593) to improve it. In the present article the writer has adopted some of the suggestions made by a committee of the American Anthropological Society in 1907, covering several of the points in question.

Stock.

Area.

Earliest Home

Tribes, &c.

Population.

I. ALGONKIAN.

Most of N. and E.

North America,

between lat. 35°

N. of the St

Lawrence

and E. of

Some 50-60,

with many

minor

About 90,000,

of which

some50,000

and S5°; centred

in the region of

the Great Lakes

and Hudson's

LakeOntario

(Brinton);

N.W. of the

Great Lakes

groups.

in Canada.

Bay.

(Thomas).

2. ARAWAKAN.

Within the terri-

Central South

Small colony

Extinct about

tory of the Calu-

s as in S.W.

America.

from Cuba.

end of 16th

century.

Florida.

3. ATAKAPAN.

In part of S.W.

Somewhere in

2.

Practically

Louisiana and

E. or N.E.

extinct; in

N.E. Texas.

Texas.

1885 4 indi-

viduals liv-

ing in

Louisiana,

and 5 in

Texas.

4.ATHABASKAN.

Interior of Alaska

and Canada; W.

Interior of

Alaska or

Some 5 o,

withnumer

About 54,000,

of which

of Hudson's Bay

N.W. Can-

ous minor

some 20,000

and N. of the

ada.

groups.

in Canada.

Algonkian; also

represented in

Oregon, Cali-

fornia, Arizona,

New Mexico,

Texas, and

northern Mexico.

5. BEOTHUKAN.

Newfoundland.

Some part of

Newfound-

land or Lab-

rador.

Local settle-

mentsonly,

Extinct; last

representa-

tive died in

1829.

6. CADDOAN.

Country between

the Arkansas and

Colorado rivers

in Louisiana,

Texas, &c., par-

ticularly on the

On the lower

Red River,

or, perhaps,

somewhere

to the S.W.

Some 12-15.

About 2000.

Red River and its

affluents; later

also in Kansas,

Nebraska, Da-

kota, and Okla-

homa.

7. CHEMAKUAN.

On the N.W. shore

of Puget Sound,

Washington; also

on Pacific coast,

near Cape Flat-

tery.

Some part of

N.W. Wash-

ington.

2.

About zoo.

8. CHIMARIKAN.

III N. California,

on Trinity river,

N.W. of the

Copehan.

Somewhere in

N.California.

a.

Practically

extinct; in

1903 only 9

individu a I s

reported

living.

9. CHINOOKAN.

On the 1 ow e r

N. of the Col-

Some to or

About 300.

Columbia river,

from the Cascades

to the Pacific

umbia, in W.

Washington.

12 with nu-

merous vil-

lages.

Ocean; on the

coast, N. to Shoal-

water Bay and S.

to 'Tillamook

Head,inWashing-

ton and Oregon.

IO.CHITIMACHAN.

Part of S.E. Louisi-

Region of

I.

Nearly ex-

ana.

Grand Lake

and river,

Louisiana.

tinct; in 1881

only So indi-

viduals sur-

viving.

II. CHUMASHAN.

In S.W. California,

S. of the Salinan

Somewhere in

S. W. Cali-

7 or more

dialects .

Nearly ex-

tinct; only

and Mariposan;

fornia.

with many

15-20 indi-

in the basins of

small settle-

viduals still

the Sta Maria,

Sta Inez, lower

ments.

living.

Sta Clara, &c., on

the coast, and the

northernSta.

Barbara Islands.

12. COPEHAN

In central N. Cali-

Somewhere in

2 chief di-

About 130 at

(Wintun).

fornia, W. of the

N.California.

visions,with

various vil-

Pujunan; W. of

many small

lages, and

the Coast range,

from San Pablo

and Suisun Bays

N. to Mount

settlements.

as many on

Round Val-

ley Reserva-

tion.

Shasta.

13. COSTANOAN.

In the coast region

Somewhere in

No true

Nearly ex-

of central Cali-

central Cali-

tribes, but

tinct; only

fornia, N. of the

fornia.

15-20 settle-

25 or 30 indi-

Salinan; from

about San Fran-

cisco S. to Point

ments.

viduals still

living.

Sur and Big

Panoche Creek,

Stock.

Area.

Earliest Home.

Tribes, &c.

Population.

and from the

Pacific Ocean to

the San Joaquin

river.

14. ESKIMOAN.

Greenlandandsome

of the Arctic

Interior of

Alaska

9 well-

marked

About 28,000,

of which

islands, the whole

northern coast N.

(Rink); in

the region

g r o u p s,

with 60-70

there are

in Green-

of the Alonkian

W. of Hud-

"set t 1 e-

land I I,000

and Athabaskan,

from the straits of

Belle Isle to the

son's Bay

(Boas); pre-

ferably the

ments,"

&c.

Alas k a

1 3, 0 0 0 ,

Canada

endoftheAleutian

latter.

4500, and

Islands; also in

extreme N.E.

Asia 1200.

Asia W. to the

Anadyr river; in

E. North America

in earlier times

possibly consider-

ablyfarthersouth.

15. ESSELENIAN.

On the coast of W.

Somewhere in

Many small

Extinct; last

California, S. of

W. or central

settlements.

speaker of

Monterey, N. of

the Salinan.

California.

language

died about

1890.

16. HAIDAN(Skit-

tagetan).

The Queen Char-

lotte Islands, off

Interior of

Alaska or

2 dialects;

about 25

About 900,

of which

the N.W. coast

N.W. Can-

c hi e f

300 are in

of British Colum-

bia, and part of

the Prince of

Wales Archi-

pelago, Alaska.

ada.

" towns,"

and many

minor set-

tlements.

Alaska.

17. IROQUOIAN.

The region about

Lakes Erie and

Somewhere be-

tween the

Some Ischief

tribes with

About 40,000,

of which

Ontario (Ontario,

New York, Penn-

sylvania, Ohio,

&c.),and on both

lower St

L a wren ce

and Hub-

son's Bay

many minor

subdivisions,

Io,000 are

in Canada;

of those in

the United

banks of the St

Lawrence, on the

(Brinton,

Hale); in S.

States 28,000

are Chero-

N. to beyond the

Ohio and

kee.

Saguenay, on the

Kentucky

S. to Gaspe; also

represented in the

(B o y 1 e ,

Thomas).

S.E.United States

by the Tuscarora,

Cherokee, &c.

(now chiefly in

Oklahoma).

18. KALAPUYAN.

In N.W. Oregon,

in the valley of

Somewhere in

N.W. Ore-

About 15-18,

withminor

Only some

140 indi-

the Willamette,

above the Falls.

gon.

divisions.

viduals still

living.

19. KARANKAWAN.

On the Texas coast,

from Galveston to

Somewhere in

S. Texas.

5-6, with

minor divi-

Extinct prob-

ably in 1858;

Padre Island.

sions.

a few sur-

vived later,

possibly, in

Mexico.

20. KERESAN.

In N. central New

Somewhere in

17 "villages"

3990, in 6

Mexico, on the

the New

(pueblos);

pueblos

Rio Grande and

Mexico-

earliermore.

(some 150

its tributaries- the

Jemez, San Jose,

&c.

Arizona

region.

at Isleta).

21. KIOWAN.

On the upper Ark-

At the foot of

I.

1219 in Okla-

ansas and Can-

adian rivers, in

Colorado, Kansas,

Oklahoma, &c.;

formerly on the

head-waters of

the Platte, and

still earlier on the

upper Yellowstone

and Missouri, in

the Rocky

Mountain s

i n S. W.

Montana.

homa.

S.W. Montana.

22. KITUNAHAN.

In S.E. British Col-

Somewhere E.

2 chief divi-

About IIoo;

umbia, N. Idaho,

and part of N.W.

of the Rocky

Mountains in

sions and 3

others.

half in

Canada and

Montana.

Montana or

half in the

Alberta.

United

States.

23. KOLUSCHAN

On the coast and

Somewhere in

Some 12-15.

About 2000.

(Tlingit).

adjacent islands

of S. Alaska, from

55° to 60° N. lat.;

also some in

the interior

of A l a s k a

o r N. W.

Canada.

Canada.

24. KULANAPAN

On the coast in

Somewhere in

About 30

About 1000.

(Pomo).

N.W. California

N.W. Cali-

local divi-

(Sonoma, Lake

and Mendocino

counties), W. of

the Yukian.

fornia.

sions, &c.;

no true

tribes.

25. KUSAN.

On the coast of

Somewhere in-

4, earlier

About 50.

central Oregon,

on Coos Bay and

I and from

Coos Bay,

Cregon.

more.

Stock.

Area.

Earliest Home.

Tribes, &c.

Population.

Coos and Coquille

rivers, S. of the

Yakonan; now

mostly on Siletz

Reservation.

26. LUTUAMIAN

(Klamath).

In the region of the

Klamath and Tule

In S. Oregon,

N. of the

2, with local

subdivisions.

1034; of these

7 5 5 K I a-

lakes, Lost and

K1 a math

math, and

Sprague rivers,

&c., in Oregon

(chiefly) and N.E.

lakes.

279 Modoc

(56 in Okla-

homa).

California; now

on Klamath Re-

servation, Oregon,

with a few also in

Oklahoma.

27. MARIPOSAN

In S. central Cali-

Somewhere in

3 0-40 groups

About 150, at

(Yokuts).

fornia, in the

central Cali-

with special

Tule river

valley of the San

Joaquin, on the

fornia.

dialects.

reservation,

&c.

Tule, Kaweah,

King's rivers,&c.;

E. of the Salinan,

S. of the Moque-

lumnan.

28.MOQUELUMNAN

In central Cali-

Somewhere in

7 dialects, no

Several hun-

(Miwok).

fornia, in three

central Cali-

true tribes;

dred; much

sections: the main

area on the W.

slope of the Sier-

ras, from the Cos-

umnes river on

the N. to the

fornia.

about 20

local groups

with numer-

ous minor

ones.

scattered.

Fresno on the S.;

a second on the

N. shore of San

Francisco B a y,

and a third (small)

S. of Clear Lake

on the head-waters

of Putah Creek.

29. MUSKOGIAN

(Muskhogean).

In the Gulf States,

E. of the Missis-

Somewhere

W. of the

A. bout 12,

with many

About 40,000;

of t h es e

sippi,most of Mis-

lower Missis-

minor divi-

38,000 in

sissippi, Alabama

and Georgia,part

of Tennessee, S.

Carolina, Florida

and Louisiana;

now mostly in

sippi.

sions.

Oklahoma,

t0001n Mis-

sissippi, 350

in Florida,

and a few in

Louisiana.

Oklahoma.

30. PAKAWAN

On both banks of

Some part of

20-25, some

Practically

(Coahuiltecan).

the Rio Grande

in Texas and

N.E. Mexico.

very small.

extinct; in

1886 about

Mexico, from its

mouth to beyond

Laredo; at one

t?me possibly E.

to Antonio, and

W. to the Sierra

30 individu-

als still liv-

ing, mostly

on the

M ex i c a n

side of the

Madre.

Rio Grande.

31. PUJuNAN

(Maidu).

In N.E. California,

E. of the Sacra-

mento river, be-

tween the Shastan

and Moquel-

umnan.

N.E. C a l i-

fornia.

No t r u e

t r i b e s;

several

larger and

very many

smaller loc-

al divisions,

" villages, "

About 250

full-bloods.

&c.

32. QUORATEAN

In extreme N.W.

Somewhere in

Many "vil-

In 1889 some

(Karok).

California, on the

Klamath river,

&c.; W. of the

Shastan.

N.California.

lages," &c.

600; much

reduced

since; pos-

sibly 300.

33. SAHAPTIAN.

In the region of

the Columbia and

its tributaries, in

parts of Washing-

ton, Idaho and

Somewhere in

the region of

theColumbia,

or farther N.

5-7.

About 4200.

Oregon; between

lat. 44° and 470,

and from the Cas-

cades to the Bitter

Root Mountains.

34. SALINAN.

On the Pacific coast

Somewhere in

2 or 3 larger

Practically

of S. W. California,

from above S.

S. W. C a 1 i-

fornia.

divisions;

n o true

extinct; in

1884 only

Antonio, to below

S. Louis Obispo;

W. of the Mari-

posan.

tribes.

10-12 indi-

v i d u a 1 s

living.

35. SALISHAN.

A large part of S.

British Columbia

and Washington,

with parts of

Central or N.

British Col-

umbia.

Some 60-65,

of which a

number are

merelylocal

About 15,000

in Canada,

and some

6300 in

Idaho and Mon-

tans; also part of

divisions.

the United

States.

Vancouverlsland,

and outliers in N.

British Columbia

(Bilqula), and

S.W. Oregon.

Stock.

Area.

Earliest Home.

Tribes, &c.

Population.

36. SHASTAN.

In N. California

In N. Cali-

6 or more

Less than 40

and S. Oregon, in

fornia or

linguistic

Shasta full-

the basins of the

Pit and Klamath

rivers, on Rogue

river and to be-

yond the Siskiyou

Oregon.

divisions.

bloods;

some 1200

Achomawi.

Mountains; S. of

the Lutuamian.

37. SHOSHONIAN.

In the W. part of

Foot-hills and

Somer2-r51n

In the United

the United States;

plains E. of

the United

States, some

most of the

the Rock y

S t a t es;

24,000.

country between

Mountains in

many more

lat. 35° and 45°

and long.105° and

N.W. United

States or

in Mexico,

ancient and

120°, with exten-

sions N., S., and

S.E. outside this

area; represented

also in California,

and in Mexico

by the Piman,

Sonoran and Na-

huatlan tribes.

Canada, but

residence

in P1 a t eau

region long-

continued.

modern.

38. SIOUAN.

In the basin of the

In the Caro-

Some 20

About 38,000;

Missouri and the

lina - Virginia

large and

of w hi c h

upperMississippi;

region.

many minor

some 1400

from about N.

lat. 33° to 53° and,

at the broadest,

from 89° to Ito°

ones.

in Canada.

W. long.; also

represented in

Wisconsin (Win-

nebago), Louisi-

ana,the Carolinas,

and Virginia

(formerly).

39. TAKELMAN.

In S. W. Oregon,

in the middle

valley of Rogue

river, on the upper

Rogue, and to

about the Cali-

fornia line or

beyond.

In some part

of S. Oregon.

2.

Practically

extinct;

perhaps 6

speakers of

the language

alive.

40. TANOAN.

In New Mexico, on

Some part of

Some 14-15

About 4200

the Rio Grande,

&c., from lat. 33°

to 36°; also a

settlement with the

New Mexico.

pueblos.

in 12 pueb-

los.

Moqui in N.E.

Arizona, and

another on the

Rio Grande at the

boundary line,

partly in Mexico.

41. 'I'IMUQuAN.

In Florida, from the

Some part of

Some 60 or

Extinct in

N. border and the

Florida.

more settle-

18th cen-

Ocilla river to

ments.

tury.

Lake Okeecho-

bee, perhaps

farther N. and S.

42. TONIKAN.

In part of E. Louisi-

Somewhere in

3.

Practically

ana and part of

the Louisi-

extinct; i n

Mississippi; in

ana - Missis-

1886 some

Avoyelles parish,

La., &c.

sippi region.

25 indivi-

duals living

at Marks-

ville, La.

43. TONKAWAN.

In S. E. Texas,

N.W. of the

Somewhere in

S. or W.

a.

Nearly ex-

tinct; in

Karankawan;

remnants now in

Oklahoma.

Texas.

18840nly78

individuals

living; in

2905 but 47,

with Pon-

k a s, in

Oklahoma.

44. TSIMSHIAN

In N.W. British

On the head-

3 main and

About 3200

(Chimmesyan).

Columbia, on the

Nass and Skeena

waters of the

Skeena river.

se v e r a 1

minor divi-

in Canada,

and 950 in

rivers, and the

adjacent islands

and coast S. to

sions.

Alaska.

Millbank Sound;

also (since 1887)

on Annette Island,

Alaska.

4 5. WAILATPUAN.

A western section

In Oregon, S.

2.

Language

(Molala) in the

of the Colum-

practically

Cascade region

between Mounts

bia river.

extinct; 405

Cayuse (in

Hood and Scott,

in Washington

and Oregon; an

eastern (Cayuse)

on the head-

waters of the

Wallawalla, Uma-

tilla and Grande

1888 only 6

spoke their

mother

tongue) are

still living;

i n 1881

about 20

Molalas.

Ronde rivers.

Stock.

Area.

Earliest Home.

Tribes, &c.

Population.

46. WAKASHAN

Most of Vancouver

Somewhere in

3 main divi-

4765,ofwhich

(Kwakiutl-

Island (except

the interior

sions, with

435 are in

Nootka).

some 3 of the E.

of British

more than

the United

coast) and most

of the coast of

Columbia.

so" tribes."

States.

British Columbia

from Gardner

channel to Cape

Mudge; also part

of extreme N.W.

Washington.

47.

In E. central Cali-

In N.W. Ne-

I.

About zoo, in

fornia and the ad-

joining part of

Nevada, in the

region of Lake

vada.

the region

of Carson,

Reno, &c.

Tahoe and the

lower Carson

valley.

48. WEITSPEKAN

(Yurok).

In N.W. California,

W. of the Quo-

In N. Cali-

fornia or S.

6 divisions;

no true

A few hun-

dreds; in

ratean.

Oregon.

tribes.

1870 esti-

mated at

2000 or

more.

49. WISHOSKAN

(Wiyot).

In N.W. California,

in the coast

region, S. of the

I n N. C a I i-

fornia.

3-5 divisions;

no true

tribes.

Nearly ex-

tinct.

Weitspekan.

50. YAKONAN.

In W. Oregon, in

W. c en t r al

4 chief divi-

About30o,on

the coast region

and on the rivers

Oregon.

sions, with

numerous

the Siletz

Reserva-

from the Yaquina

to the Umpqua.

villages.

tion.

51.

In central N. Cali-

So m e w h e r e

a.

Practically

fornia in the region

of Round Moun-

tain, &c., S. of

the Shastan.

farther E.

extinct; in

1884hut 35

individuals

living.

YUCHIAN.

In E. Georgia, on

the Savannah

Somewhere E.

of the Chata-

1.

About Soo,

with Creeks

river from above

Augusta down to

the Ogeechee, and

also on Chatahoo-

chee river; rem-

nants now in

hoochee.

in O k I a-

homa.

Oklahoma.

YUKIAN.

In N.W. California,

E.of the Copehan,

with a N. and a

N. or central

California.

divisions;

no true

tribes.

About 25u.

S. section; in the

Round Valley

region.

54. YUMAN.

In the extreme S.W.

of the United

N. W. Arizona.

9-10.

IntheUnited

States about

States (lower

4800.

Colorado and Gila

valley), part of

California, most

of Lower Cali-

fornia, and a small

part of Mexico.

55. ZUNIAN.

In N.W. New

Mexico, on the

Some part of

the N e w

I.

1500.

Zuni river.

Mexico - Ari-

zona region.

In the light of the most recent and authoritative researches and investigations the linguistic stocks of American aborigines north of Mexico, past and present, the areas occupied, earliest homes (or original habitats), number of tribes, subdivisions, &c., and population, may be given as follows Of these 55 different linguistic stocks 5 (Arawakan, Beothukan, Esselenian, Karankawan and Timuquan) are completely extinct, the Arawakan, of course, in North America only; 13 (Atakapan, Chimarikan, Chitimachan, Chumashan,Costanoan, Kusan, Pakawan, Salinan, Takelman, Tonikan, Tonkawan, Wishoskan, Yakonan) practically extinct; while the speakers of a few other languages or the survivors of the people once speaking them (e.g. Chemakuan, Chinookan, Copehan, Kalapuyan, Mariposan, Washoan, Yukian), number about 200 or 300, in some cases fewer. Of the Wailatpuans, although some individuals belonging to the stock are still living, the language itself is practically extinct. The distribution of the various stocks reveals some interesting facts. Among these are the stretch of the Eskimoan along the whole Arctic coast and its extension into Asia; the immense areas occupied by the Athabaskan and the Algonkian, and (less notably) the Shoshonian and the Siouan; the existence of few stocks on the Atlantic slope (from Labrador to Florida, east of the Mississippi, only 8 are represented); the great multiplicity of stocks in the Pacific coast region, particularly in Oregon and California; the extension of the Shoshonian, Yuman and Athabaskan southward into Mexico, the Shoshonian in ancient, the Athabaskan in modern times; the existence of an Arawakan colony in southwestern Florida, a 16th-century representative in North America of a South American linguistic stock. Some stocks, e.g. Atakapan, Beothukan, Chemakuan, Chimarikan, Chitimachan, Kiowan, Kitunahan, Lutuamian, Takelman, Tonkawan, Wailatpuan, Yanan, Yuchian, Zuni, &c., were not split up into innumerable dialects, possessing at most but two, three or four, usually fewer. Of the larger stocks, the Athabaskan, Algonkian, Shoshonian, Siouan, Iroquoian, Salishan, &c., possess many dialects often mutually unintelligible. In marked contrast with this is the case of the Eskimoan stock, where, in spite of the great distance over which it has extended, dialect variations are at a minimum, and the people " have retained their language in all its minor features for centuries " (Boas). As to the reason for the abundance of linguistic stocks in the region of the Pacific (from Alaska to Lower California, west of long. 115°, there are 37: Eskimoan, Koluschan, Athabaskan, Haidan, Tsimshian, Wakashan, Salishan, Kitunahan, Chimakuan, Chinookan, Sahaptian, Wailatpuan, Shoshonian, Kalapuyan, Yakonan, Kusan, Takelman, Lutuamian, Quoratean, Weitspekan, Wishoskan, Shastan, Yanan, Chimarikan, Yukian, Copehan, Pujunan, Washoan, Kulanapan, Moquelumnan, Mariposan, Costanoan, Esselenian, Salinan, Chumashan, Yuman) there has been much discussion. Of these no fewer than 18 are confined practically to the limits of the present state of California. Dialects of Athabaskan, Shoshonian and Yuman also occur within the Californian areas, thus making, in all, representatives of 21 linguistic stocks in a portion of the continent measuring less than 156,000 sq. m. In explanation of this great diversity of speech several theories have been put forward. One is to the effect that here, as in the region of the Caucasus in the Old World, the multiplicity of languages is due to the fact that tribe after tribe has been driven into the mountain valleys, &c., by the pressure of stronger and more aggressive peoples, who were setting forth on careers of migration and conquest. Another view, advocated by Horatio Hale in 1886 (Proc. Amer. Assoc. Adv. Sci.; also Proc. Canad. Inst., Toronto, 1888), is that this great diversity of human speech is due to the language-making instinct of children, being the result of " its exercise by young children accidentally isolated from the teachings and influence of grown companions." A pair of young human beings, separating thus from the parent tribe and starting social life in a new environment by themselves, would, according to Mr Hale, soon produce a new dialect or a new language. This theory was looked upon with favour by Romanes, Brinton, and other psychologists and ethnologists. Dr R. B. Dixon (Congr. intern. des. Amer., Quebec, 1906, pp. 255-263), discussing some aspects of this question, concludes " that the great linguistic and considerable cultural complexity of this whole California-Oregon region is due to progressive differentiation rather than to the crowding into this restricted area of remnants of originally discrete stocks." How far two dialects of one stock can go in the way of such differentiation without becoming absolutely distinct is illustrated by the Achomawi branches of the Shastan family of speech, which Dr Dixon has very carefully investigated.

The test of vocabulary is not the only means by which the languages of the North American aborigines might be classified. There are peculiarities of phonetics, morphology, grammar, sentencestructure, &c., which suggest groupings of the linguistic stocks independent of their lexical content. Some languages are harsh and consonantal (e.g. the Kootenay and others of the North Pacific region), some melodious and vocalic, as are certain of the tongues of California and the south-eastern United States. Some employ reduplication with great frequency, like certain Shoshonian dialects; others, like Kootenay, but rarely. A few, like the Chinook, are exceedingly onomatopoeic. Some, like the northern languages of California, have no proper plural forms. Of the Californian languages the Pomo alone distinguishes gender in the pronoun, a feature common to other languages no farther off than Oregon. The high development and syntactical use of demonstratives which characterize the Kwakiutl are not found among the Californian tongues. A few languages, like the Chinook and the Tonika, possess real grammatical gender. Some languages are essentially prefix, others essentially suffix tongues; while yet others possess both prefixes and suffixes, or even infixes as well. In some languages vocalic changes, in others consonantal, have grammatical or semantic meaning. In certain languages tense, mood and voice are rather weakly developed. In some languages syntactical cases occur (e.g. in certain Californian tongues), while in many others they are quite unknown. Altogether the most recent investigations have revealed a much greater variety in morphological and in grammatical processes than was commonly believed to exist, so that the general statement that the American Indian tongues are all clearly and distinctly of the " incorporating " and " polysynthetic " types needs considerable modification. Using criteria of phonetics, morphology, grammar, &c., some of the best authorities have been able to suggest certain groups of North American Indian languages exhibiting peculiarities justifying the assumption of relationship together. Thus Dr Franz Boas (Mem. Intern. Congr. Anthrop., 18 93, pp. 339-34 6, and Ann. Archaeol. Rep. Ontario, 1905, pp. 88106) has grouped the linguistic stocks of the North Pacific coast region as follows: (1) Tlingit (Koluschan) and Haida; (2) Tsimshian; (3) Wakashan (Kwakiutl-Nootka), Salish, Chemakum; (4) Chinook. In the same region the present writer has suggested a possible relationship of the Kootenay with Shoshonian. In the Californian area Dr R. B. Dixon and Dr A. L. Kroeber have made out these probable groups among the numerous language stocks of that part of the United States: (1) Chumashan and Salinan; (2) Yurok (Weitspekan), Wishoskan, Athabaskan, Karok (Quoratean), Chimarikan; (3) Maidu (Pujunan), Lutuamian, Wintun (Copehan), Yukian, Pomo (Kulanapan), Costanoan, Esselenian, Yokuts (Mariposan), Shoshonian, Shastan, Moquelumnan and possibly Washoan; (4) Yanan; (5) Yuman. Suggestions of even larger groups than any of these have also been made. It may be that, judged by certain criteria, the Kootenay, Shoshonian, Iroquoian and Siouan may belong together, but this is merely tentative. It is also possible, from the consideration of morphological peculiarities, that some if not all of the languages of the so-called " PalaeoAsiatic " peoples of Siberia, as Boas has suggested (Science, vol. xxiii., n.s., 1906, p. 644), may be included within the American group of linguistic stocks. Indeed Sternberg (Intern. Amer.-Kongr. xiv., Stuttgart, 1904, pp. 137-140) has undertaken to show the relationship morphologically of one of these languages, the Giliak (of the island of Saghalin and the region about the mouth of the Amur), to the American tongues, and its divergence from the " Ural-Altaic " family of speech. Here, however, more detailed investigations are needed to settle the question.

At one time the opinion was widely prevalent that primitive languages changed very rapidly, sometimes even within a generation, and the American Indian tongues were rather freely used as typical examples of such extreme everywhere, and for the speech of the New World aborigines Dr Franz Boas states (Hndb. Amer. Ind. pt. i., 1907, p. 759): " There is, however, no historical proof of the change of any Indian language since the time of the discovery comparable with that of the language of England between the 10th and 13th centuries." Another statement that has obtained currency, appearing even in otherwise reputable quarters sometimes, is to the effect that some of the vocabularies of American Indian languages consist of but a few hundred words, one being indeed so scanty that its speakers could not converse by night, since darkness prevented resort to the use of gesture. This is absolutely contrary to fact, for the vocabularies of the languages of the American Indians are rich, and, according to the best authority on the subject, " it is certain that in every one there are a couple of thousand of stem words and many thousand words, as that term is defined in English dictionaries " (Boas). The number of words in the vocabulary of the individual Indian is also much greater than is generally thought to be the case. It was long customary, even in " scientific " circles, to deny to American Indian tongues the possession of abstract terms, but here again the authority of the best recent investigators is conclusive, for " the power to form abstract ideas is, nevertheless, not lacking, and the development of abstract thought would find in every one of the languages a ready means of expression " (Boas). In this connexion, however, it should be remembered that, in general, the languages of the American aborigines " are not so well adapted to generalized statements as to lively descriptions." The holophrastic terms characteristic of so many American Indian languages " are not due to a lack of power to classify, but are rather expressions of form of culture, single terms being intended for those ideas of prime importance to the people" (Boas). This consideration of American primitive tongues in their relation to culture-types opens up a comparatively new field of research, and one of much evolutional significance.

As a result of the most recent and authoritative philological investigations, the following may be cited as some of the chief characteristics of many, and in some cases, of most of the languages of the aborigines north of Mexico.

I. Tendency to express ideas with great graphic detail as to place, form, &c.

2. " Polysynthesis," a device making possible, by the use of modifications of stems and radicals and the employment of prefixes, suffixes, and sometimes infixes, &c., the expression of a large number of special ideas. By such methods of composition (to cite two examples from Boas) the Eskimo can say at one breath, so to speak, " He only orders him to go and see," and the Tsimshian, ' He went with him upward in the dark and came against an obstacle." The Eskimo Takusariartorumagaluarnerpd ? (" Do you think he really intends to go to look after it ? ") is made up from the following elements: Takusar(pd), " he looks after it "; iartor (poq), " he goes to "; uma (voq), " he intends to "; (g) aluar (poq), " he does so, but "; nerpoq, " do you think he." The Cree " word " " kekawewechetushekamikowanowow " (" may it," i.e. the grace of Jesus Christ, " remain with you ") is resolvable into: Kelawow (here split into ke at the beginning and -owow as terminal), " you " (pl.); ka=sign of futurity (first and second persons); we=an optative particle; weche =' with "; tusheka = verbal radical, " remain "; mik=pronominal particle showing that the subject of the verb is in the third person and the object in the second, " it-you "; owan=verbal possessive particle, indicating that the subject of the verb is something inanimate belonging to the animate third person, " his-it." The Carrier (Athabaskan) lekcenahweshwndc thcencezkrok, " I usually recommence to walk to and fro on all fours while singing," which Morice calls " a simple word," is built up from the following elements: le =" prefix expressing reciprocity, which, when in connexion with a verb of locomotion, indicates that the movement is executed between two certain points without giving prominence to either "; kœ =particle denoting direction toward these points; na=" iterative particle, suggesting that the action is repeated "; hwe = particle referring to the action as being in its incipient stage; sheen= " song " (when incorporated in a verb it " indicates that singing accompanies the action expressed by the verbal root "); doe =' ` a particle called for by sheen, said particle always entering into the composition of verbs denoting reference to vocal sounds "; thce =" the secondary radical of the uncomposite verb thfzkret inflected from thi for the sake of euphony with ncez; ncez =" the pronominal element of the whole compound " (the n is demanded by the previous hwe, ce marks the present tense, and z marks the first person singular of the third conjugation; krok = " the main radical, altered here by the usitative from the normal form kret, and is expressive of locomotion habitually executed on four feet or on all fours." 3. Incorporation of noun and adjectives in verb, or of pronouns in verb. From the Kootenay language of south-eastern British Columbia the following examples may be given: Natltlamkine = " He carries (the) head in (his) hand "; Howankotlamkine =' ` I shake (the) head in (my) hand "; Witlwumine =" (His) belly is large "; Tlitkatine =" He has no tail "; Matlnaktletline = " He opens his eyes." In these expressions are incorporated, with certain abbreviations of form, the words aqktlam, " head "; aqkowum, " belly "; aqkat, " tail "; aqkaktletl, " eyes." In some languages the form for the noun incorporated in the verb is entirely different from that in independent use. Of pronominal incorporation these examples are from the Kootenay: Nupqanapine =" He sees Honupqanisine =" I see you "; Tshatlipitlisine =" He will kill you"; Tshatlitqanawasine=" He will bite us "; Tshatltsukwatisine =" 'is going to seize you; Hintshatltlpatlnapine=" You will honour me." For incorporation of adjectives these examples will serve: Honitenustik = " I paint (my face)," literally, " I make it red" (kanohos, " red "; the radical is nos or for nohos); Howitlkeine =" I shout," literally, " I talk big "; Howitlkaine = " I am tall (big)." In some languages the pronouns denoting subject, direct object and indirect object are all incorporated in the verb.

4. The formation of nouns of very composite character by the use of stems or radicals and prefixes, suffixes, &c., of various sorts, the intricacy of such formations exceeding often anything known in the Indo-European and Semitic languages. Often the component parts are " clipped," or changed by decapitation, decaudation, syncopation, &c., before being used in the compound. The following examples from various Indian languages will illustrate the process: - Kootenay: Aqkinkanuktlamnam =" crown of' head," from aq (prefix of uncertain meaning), kinkan =" top," tlam =" head," -nam (suffix =" somebody's "). Tlingit: Kanyiqkuwate =" aurora," literally, " fire (kan)-like (yiq)-out-of-doors (ku)-colour (wale)." 5. The development of a great variety of forms for personal and demonstrative pronouns. In the latter, sometimes, the language distinguishes " visibility and invisibility, present and past, location to the right, left, front and back of, and above and below the speaker " (Boas). According to Morice (Trans. Canad. Inst., 1889-1890, p. 187), the Carrier language of the Athabaskan stock has no fewer than seventeen possessive pronouns of the third person.

6. Indistinctness of demarcation between noun and verb; in some languages the transitive and in others the intransitive only is really verbal in form.

14

'a y. 15a

variation. The error of this view is now admitted 7. The use of the intransitive verb as a means of expressing ideas which in European tongues, e.g., would be carried by adjectives. In the Carrier language almost all adjectives are " genuine verbs " (Morice).

8. The expression of abstract nouns in a verbalized form. Thus Cree (Algonkian) generally says, in preference to using the abstract noun pimatisewin, " life," the periphrastic verb apimatisenanewuk, literally " that they (indefinite as to person) live." So far is this carried sometimes that Horden (Cree Grammar, London, 1881, p. 5) says: " I have known an Indian speak a long sentence, on the duties of married persons to each other, without using a single noun." As an interesting example of a long word in American-Indian languages may be mentioned the Iroquois taontasakonatiatawitserakninonseronniontonhatieseke. This " word," which, as Forbes (Congr. intern. d. Amer., Quebec, 1906, p. 103) suggests, would serve well on the signboard of a dealer in novelties, is translated by him, " Que plusieurs personnes viennent acheter des habits pour d'autres personnes avec de quoi payer." Not so formidable is deyeknonhsedehrihadasterasterahetakwa, a term for " stove polish," in use on the Mohawk Reservation near Brantford, Ontario.

The literature in the native languages of North America due to missionary efforts has now reached large proportions. Naturally Bible translations have been most important. According to Wilberforce Eames (Handbook of Amer. Inds., 1907, pt. i. pp. 1 431 45), " the Bible has been printed in part or in whole in 32 Indian languages north of Mexico. In 18 one or more portions have been printed; in 9 others the New Testament or more has appeared; and in 5 languages, namely, the Massachuset, Cree, Labrador Eskimo, Santee Dakota and Tukkuthkutchin, the whole Bible is in print." Of the 32 languages possessing Bible translations of some sort 3 are Eskimoan dialects, 4 Athabaskan, 13 Algonkian, 3 Iroquoian, 2 Muskogian, 2 Siouan, 1 Caddoan, 1 Sahaptian, 1 Wakashan, 1 Tsimshian, 1 Haidan. Translations of the Lord's Prayer, hymns, articles of faith and brief devotional compositions exist now in many more languages and dialects. A goodly number of other books have also been made accessible in Indian versions, e.g. Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress (Dakota, 1857), Baxter's Call to the Unconverted (Massachuset, 1655), Goodrich's Child's Book of the Creation (Choctaw, 1839), Thomas a Kempis's Imitation of Christ (Greenland Eskimo, 1787), Newton's The King's Highway (Dakota, 1879), &c. The " Five Civilized Tribes," who are now full-fledged citizens of the state of Oklahoma, possess a mass of literature (legal, religious, political, educational, &c.) published in the alphabet adapted from the " Cherokee Alphabet " invented by Sequoyah about 1821, "which at once raised them to the rank of a literary people." Of periodicals in Indian languages there have been many published from time to time among the " Five Civilized Tribes." Of the Cherokee Advocate, Mooney said in 1897-1898, " It is still continued under the auspices of the Nation, printed in both languages (i.e. Cherokee and English), and distributed free at the expense of the Nation to those unable to read English-an example without parallel in any other government." More or less ephemeral periodicals (weekly, monthly, &c.) are on record in various Algonkian, Iroquoian, Siouan and other languages, and the Greenland Eskimo have one, published irregularly since 1861. Wilberforce Eames (Handbook of Amer. Inds., 1907, pt. i. p. 389) chronicles 122 dictionaries (of which more than half are still in MSS.) of 63 North American-Indian languages, belonging to 19 different stocks.

The following linguistic stocks are represented by printed dictionaries (in one or more dialects): Algonkian, Athabaskan, Chinookan, Eskimoan, Iroquoian, Lutuamian, Muskogian, Salishan, Shoshonian, Siouan. There exists a considerable number of texts (myths, legends, historical data, songs, grammatical material, &c.) in quite a number of Indian languages that have been published by scientific investigators. The Algonkian (e.g. Jones's Fox Texts, 1908), Athabaskan (e.g. Goddard's Hupa Texts, 1904, Matthews's Navaho Legends, 1897, &c.), Caddoan (e.g. Miss A. C. Fletcher's Hako Ceremony, 1900), Chinookan (Boas's Chinook Texts, 1904, and Kathlamet Texts, 1901), Eskimoan (texts in Boas's Eskimo of Baffin Land, &c., 1901, 1908; and Thalbitzer's Eskimo Language, 1904, Barnum's Innuit Grammar, 1901), Haidan (Swanton's Haida Texts, 1905, &c.), Iroquoian (texts in Hale's Iroquois Book of Rites, 1883, and Hewitt's Iroquoian Cosmology, 1899), Lutuamian (texts in Gatschet's Klamath Indians, 1890), Muskogian (texts in Gatschet's Migration Legend of the Creeks, 1884-1888), Salishan (texts in various publications of Boas and Hill-Tout), Siouan (Riggs and Dorsey in various publica tions), Tsimshian (Boas's Tsimshian Texts, 1902), Wakashan (Boas's Kwakiu'l Texts, 1902-1905), &c.

The question of the direction of migration of the principal aboriginal stocks north of Mexico has been reopened of late years. Not long ago there seemed to be practical agreement as to the following views. The Eskimo stock had reached itsresent habitats from a primitive of lndan p p stocks. home somewhere in the interior of north-western Canada or Alaska; the general trend of the Athabaskan migrations, and those of the Shoshonian tribes had been south and south-east, the first from somewhere in the interior of northwestern Canada, the second from about the latitude of southern British Columbia; the Algonkian tribes had moved south, east and west from a point somewhere between the Great Lakes and Hudson Bay; the Iroquoian stock had passed southward and westward from some spot to the north-east of the Great Lakes; the Siouan tribes, from their primitive home in the Carolinas, had migrated westward beyond the Mississippi; some stocks, like the Kitunahan, now found west of the Rocky Mountains, had dwelt formerly in the plains region to the east. Professor Cyrus Thomas, however, of the Bureau of American Ethnology, discussing primary Indian migrations in North America (Congr. intern. d. Amer., Quebec, 1906, i. 189-204), rejects the theory that the Siouan stock originated in the Carolinas, and adopts for them an origin in the region north of Lake Superior, whence he also derives the Iroquoian stock, whose primitive home Dr David Boyle (Ann. Archaeol. Rep. Ontario, 1905, p. 1 54), the Canadian ethnologist, would place in Kentucky and southern Ohio. Another interesting contribution to this subject is made by Mr P. E. Goddard (Congr. intern. des. Amer., Quebec, 1906, i. 337-358). Contemplating the distribution of the tribes belonging to the Athabaskan stock in three divisions, viz. a northern (continuous and very extensive), a Pacific coast division (scattered through Washington, Oregon, California), and a southern division which occupies a large area in Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, Kansas, Texas and Mexico, Mr Goddard suggests that the intrusion of non-Athabaskan peoples into a region once completely in the possession of the Athabaskan stock is the best explanation for the facts as now existing not explicable from assimilation to environment, which has here played a great role. It is possible also that a like explanation may hold for the conditions apparent in some other linguistic stocks. Many Indian tribes have been forcibly removed from their own habitats to reservations, or induced to move by missionary efforts, &c. Thus, in the state of Oklahoma are to be found representatives of the following tribes: Apache, Arapaho, Caddo, Cherokee, Cheyenne, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Comanche, Creek, Iowa, Kansa, Kickapoo, Kiowa, Miami, Missouri, Modoc, Osage, Oto, Ottawa, Pawnee, Peoria, Ponca, Potawatomi, Quapaw, Sac and Fox, Seminole, Seneca, Shawnee, Tonkawa, Wichita, Wyandot, &c.; these belong to 10 different linguistic stocks, whose original habitats were widely distant from one another in many cases.

Some of the American-Indian linguistic stocks (those of California especially) hardly know real tribal divisions, but local groups or settlements only; others have many large and important tribes.

The tabular alphabetical list given in the following pages contains the names of the more important and more interesting tribes of American aborigines north of Mexico, and of the stocks to which they belong, their situation and population in 1909, the degree of intermixture with whites or negroes, their social, moral and religious condition, state of progress, &c., and also references to the best or the most recent literature concerning them.

Up to the date of their publication references to the literature concerning the tribes of the stocks treated will be round in Pilling's bibliographies: Algonquian (1891), Athabascan (1892), Chinookan (1893), Eskimoan (1887), Iroquoian (1888), Muskhogean (1889), Salishan (1893), Siouan (1887) and Wakashan (1894). See also the Handbook of American Indians North of Mexico (Washington, 1907-1910); and the sumptuous monograph of E. S. Curtis, The North American Indian (N. Y., vols. i.-xx., 1908), with its remarkable reproduction of Indian types.

Tribe.

Stock.

Situation, Population, &c.

Degree of

Intermixture.

Condition, Progress, &c.

Authorities.

ABNAKI.

Algonkian.

At Becancour, Quebec, 27; at St

Francois du Lac and Pierreville,

330. Decreasing.

Probably no pure

blood left.

As civilized as the neighbouring

whites. All Catholics.

Maurault, Hist. des Abinaquis (Quebec,

1866); Jack, Trans. Canad. Inst.,

1892-1893.

ACNOMAWI

(Pit river Indians).

Shastan.

N.E. California. About 'too in the

Pit river region; also 50 or 60

on the Klamath Reservation,

Oregon.

Little.

Progress very slow; influence of

schools felt. Klamath Achomawi

under Methodist influence.

Powers, Contrib. N. Amer. Ethnol.,

vol. iii., 1877; various writings of

Dr R. B. Dixon, American Anthro-

pologist, 1905-1908, &c.

ALEUTS.

Eskimoan.

Aleutian Islands and part of Alaska.

About 1600. Decreasing.

About 50% are

mixed bloods.

"Decaying." Once converted to

Greek Orthodox church. Metho-

dist mission at Unalaska.

Works (in Russian) of Veniaminov,

1840-1848; Golder, Journ. Amer.

Folk-Lore, 1905-1907; Chamberlain,

Diet. Relig. and Ethics (Hastings,

Vol. i., 1908).

AMALECITES

Algonkian.

106 at Viger (Cacouna, Quebec);

Probably few pure

Fairly good. At Viger industrially

Writings of S. T. Rand; Chamberlain

(Maliseets).

702 in various parts of W. New

Brunswick. Apparently increas-

ing.

bloods.

unsettled. Catholics.

(M.), Maliseet Vocabulary (Cam-

bridge, 1899).

APACHE.

Athabaskan.

In Arizona, 4 879; New Mexico, 1244;

Considerable Span-

Marked improvement here and there.

Cremony, Life among the Apaches

Oklahoma, 453 Not rapidly de-

creasing as formerly thought.

ish blood due to

captives, &c.

Catholic and Lutheran missions.

(1868); Bourke, gth Ann. Rep. Bur.

Ethnol., 1887-1888, and Journ. Amer.

Folk-Lore, 1890; Hrdlicka, Ameri-

can Anthropologist, 1905.

ARAPAHO.

Algonkian.

358 at Ft. Belknap Reservation,

Montana; 873 at Wind river

Reservation, Wyoming; 885 in

Oklahoma. Holding their own.

S o m e S pan i s h

(Mexican) blood

in places.

Oklahoma Arapaho American citi-

zens; progress elsewhere. Men-

nonite missions chiefly; also Dutch

Reformed.

Writings of Kroeber and Dorsey, Bull.

Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 1900-1907,

and Pub1. Field Columb. Mus.,

1903; Scott, Amer. Anthrop., 1907.

ASSINmOiN.

Siouan.

In Montana, 1248; Alberta, 971;

Saskatchewan, 420.

Some little.

In Canada "steady advance," else-

where good. Alberta Assiniboins

are Methodists; in Montana

Maclean, Canadian Savage Folk

(Toronto, 1890); McGee, 15th Ann.

Rep. Bur. Ethnol., 1893-1894.

Catholic and Presbyterian mis-

sions on reservations.

BABINES.

Athabaskan.

530 on Babine Lake, Bulkley river,

&c., in central British Columbia.

Little, if any.

Conservative. Little progress.

Reached by Catholic mission of

Stuart Lake, B.C.

Morice, Anthropos, 1906-1907, and Ann.

Arch. Rep. Ontario, 1905, and other

writings.

BANNOCK.

Shoshonian.

About 500 at Ft. Hall, and 78 at

Lemhi Agency, Idaho.

Little.

Considerable improvement morally

and industrially.

Hoffman, Proc. Amer. Philos. Soc.,

1886; Mooney, 14th Ann. Rep. Bur.

Ethnol., 1892-189 3; Lowie, Anthrop.

Pap. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 1909.

BEAVER.

Athabaskan.

About 700 on Peace river, a western

affluent of Lake Athabaska.

Very little.

Rather stationary.

See Babines.

BILQULA

(Bellacoola).

Salishan.

287 on Dean Inlet, Bentinck Arm,

Bellacoola river, &c., coast of

central British Columbia. De-

creasing.

Little.

Not very encouraging. Mission

influence not yet strongly felt.

Boas, Rep. Brit. Assoc. Adv. Sci.,

1891, and Mem. Amer. Mus. Nat.

Hist., 1898.

BLACKFEET

Algonkian.

About 824 in Alberta, Canada. De-

Little.

Steadily improving morally and

Maclean, Canadian Savage Folk

(Siksika).

creasing.

financially. Anglicans, 2 3 7; Catho-

(Toronto, 1890), and other writings;

Iics, 260; pagans, 327.

Grinnell, Blackfoot Lodge - Tales

(N.Y., 1903), and other writings;

Wissler, Ann. Arch. Rep. Ontario,

1905; Schultz, My Life as an Indian

(N.Y., 1907); Wissler, Anthrop. Pap.

Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 1908.

Algonkian.

1168 near Ft. Macleod, Alberta.

Probably decreasing somewhat.

Little.

All able-bodied Indians will soon

be self-supporting. Presbyterians,

150; Catholics, 150; the rest

pagan.

See Blackfeet.

CADDO.

Caddoan.

550 in Oklahoma. Increasing

slightly.

Considerable French

blood.

Citizens of United States. Catholic,

Methodist and Presbyterian mis-

sions.

Mooney, 14th Rep. Ethnol.,

1892-1893; writings of Fletcher,

Dorsey, &c.

CARIBOO-EATERS.

Athabaskan.

1700 in the region E. of Lake Atha-

baska, N.W. Canada.

Little, if any.

Little progress.

See Babines.

CARRIERS.

Athabaskan.

970 between Tatla Lake and Ft.

Alexandria, central British Col-

umbia.

Little.

Semi-sedentary and naturally pro-

gressive as Indians; improvements

beginning to be marked. Under

influence of Catholic mission at

Morice, Proc. Canad. Inst., 1889,

Trans. Canad. Inst., 1894, Hist. of

Northern Inter. of British Columbia

(Toronto, 1904), and other writings.

Stuart Lake, B.C.

See Babines.

CATAWBA.

Siouan.

About too on the Catawba river,

York county, South Carolina.

Decreasing.

Much mixed with

white blood.

Slowly adopting white man's ways.

Chiefly farmers.

Mooney, Siouan Tribes of the East

(Washington, 1894); Gatschet,

American Anthropologist, 1900;

Harrington, ibid., 1908.

CAYUGA.

Iroquoian.

179 on the Iroquois Reservations in

New York State; 1044 with the

Some English ad-

mixture.

Canadian Cayuga steadily improv-

ing; they are "pagan."

See Six Nations.

Six Nations in Ontario; also some

with the Seneca in Oklahoma and

with Oneida in Wisconsin.

CAYUSE.

Wailatpuan.

405 on Umatilla Reservation, Oregon.

About t are of mixed

blood, chiefly

French.

Conditions improving. Good work

of Catholic and Presbyterian

missions.

Mowry, Marcus Whitman (1901);

Lewis, Mem. Amer. Anthrop. Assoc.,

1906.

CHEHALIS.

Salishan.

182 on Puyallup Reservation, Wash-

ington. Perhaps increasing slightly.

No data.

Gradually improving and generally

prosperous. Congregational mis-

sion.

Gibbs, Contrib. N. Amer. Ethnol.,

vol. iii., 1877; Eells, Hist. of Ind.

Missions on the Pacific Coast

(N.Y., 1882), and other writings.

CHEMEHUEVI.

Shoshonian.

About 300 on the Colorado Reserva-

tion; a few elsewhere in Arizona

and California.

No data.

Some improvement. Missions of the

Presbyterians and of the Church of

the Nazarene.

See Ute.

CHEROKEE.

1

Iroquoian.

About 28,000, of which 1489 are in

North Carolina and the rest in

Oklahoma.

Not more than }

are of approxi-

mately pure

blood.

Oklahoma Cherokee citizens of the

United States, and making excel-

lent progress. Various religious

faiths.

Royce, 5th Ann. Rep. Bur. Ethnol.,

1883-1884; Mooney, 7th Rep., 1885-

1886, and especially 19th Rep., 5897-

1898.

Tribe.

Stock.

Situation, Population, &c.

Degree of

Intermixture.

Condition, Progress, &c.

Authorities.

CHEYENNE.

Algonkian.

1440 northern Cheyenne in Montana,

1894 southern Cheyenne in Okla-

homa. Former increasing, latter

decreasing.

Some white blood,

from captives,&c.

Southern Cheyenne citizens of United

States; Mennonite mission doing

good work. Northern Cheyenne

making progress as labourers, &c.;

Mooney, 14th Ann. Rep. Bur. Ethnol.,

1892-189 3; Dorsey, Publ. Field

Columb. Mus., 1905; Grinnell,

Intern. Congr. Americanists, 1902-

Mennonite and Catholic missions.

1906; Journ. Amer. Folk-Lore, 2907-

2908; Amer. Anthrop., 1902-1906;

Mooney and Petter, Mem. Amer.

Anthrop. Assoc., 1907.

CHICKAHOMINY.

Algonkian.

Some 220 on Chickahominy river,

Virginia.

No p u r e h 1 o o d s

left. Consider-

able negro ad-

mixture.

Fishers and Farmers.

Tooker, Algonquian Series (N.Y.,

1900); Mooney, Amer. Anthrop.,

1907.

CHICKASAW.

Muskogian.

5558 in Oklahoma.

Large admixture of

white blood.

American citizens and progressing

well. Various religious faiths.

Speck, Journ. Amer. Folk-Lore, 1907,

and Amer. Anthrop., 1907.

CHILCOTIN.

Athabaskan.

About 45 o on Chilcotin river, in S.

central British Columbia.

Little.

Fairly laborious, but clinging to

native customs, though making

progress. Catholic mission influ-

ence.

Writings of Morice (see Carriers);

Farrand, Mem. Amer. Mus. Nat.

Hist., 1900.

CHILKAT.

Koluschan.

About 700 at head of Lynn Canal,

Alaska. Decreasing.

No data.

Little progress.

Emmons and Boas, Mem. Amer. Mus.

Nat. Hist., 1908.

CHINOOK.

Chinookan.

About 300 in Oregon. Decreasing.

Some little.

Stationary or "worse."

Boas, Chinook Texts (Washington,

1894), and other writings; Sapir,

Amer. Anthrop., 1907.

CHIPEWYAN.

Athabaskan.

About 3000 in the region S. of Lake

Some Canadian-

Coming to be more influenced by the

Writings of Petitot, Legoff, Morice

Athabaska, N.W. Canada.

French admix-

ture.

whites. Reached by Catholic

missions.

(see Babines), &c.; Morice, An-

thropos, 1906-1907, and Ann. Arch.

Rep. Ontario, 1905.

CHIPPEWA

(Ojibwa)

Algonkian.

About 18,000 in Ontario, Manitoba,

&c.; nearly the same number in

Much French and

English admix-

Good progress. Many Indians quite

equal to average whites of neigh-

Warren, Minn. list. Soc. Coll., 1885;

Blackbird, Ottawa and Chippewa

the United States (Michigan,

Wisconsin, Minnesota, N. Dakota).

ture in various

regions.

bourhood. Among the Canadian

Chippewa the Methodists, Catho-

Tics and Anglicans are well repre-

sented; among those in the United

Indians (1887); W. Jones, Ann.

Arch. Rep. Ontario, 1905; Hugolin,

Congr. int. d. Amer. (Quebec, 1906);

P. Jones, Hist. Ojebway Inds. (1861).

States the Catholics and Episco-

palians chiefly, also Methodists,

Lutherans, &c. A number of

native ministers.

CHOCTAW.

Muskogian.

17,529 in Oklahoma; 5356 in Missis-

Large element of

Citizens of United States, making

Gatschet, Migration Legend Creeks

sippi and Louisiana.

white and some

negro blood.

good progress. Various religious

faiths.

(1884-1888); Speck, Amer. Anthrop.,

1907.

CLAYOQUOT.

Wakashan.

224 in the region of Clayoquot Sound,

Vancouver Island. Decreasing.

No data.

Rather stationary, but beginning to

improve. Influence of Catholic

mission and industrial school.

See Nootka.

CLALLAM.

Salishan.

354 on Puyallup Reservation, Wash-

ington.

Little.

Improving, but suffering from white

contact. Congregationalist mis-

sion.

Eells in Ann. Rep. Smiths. Inst., 1887,

and other writings.

COLVILLE.

Salishan.

316 at Colville Agency, Washington.

Some Canadian-

Improving.

See Chehalis.

Decreasing slightly.

French, &c.

COMANCHE.

Shoshonian.

1408 in Oklahoma. Now holding

their own.

Some due to Spanish

(Mexican) cap-

tives, &c.

Good progress, in spite of white

impositions.

Mooney, 14th Ann. Rep. Bur. Ethnol.,

1892-1893.

COWICHAN.

Salishan.

About r000 on E. coast of Vancouver

Island, and on islands in Gulf of

Georgia.

Little.

Industrious; steady progress. Catho-

lie and Methodist missions, chiefly

former.

Hill-Tout, Rep. Brit. Assoc. Adv. Sci.,

1902, and Trans. R. Anthrop. Inst.,

1907; Boas, Rep. Brit. Assoc. Adv.

Sci., 1889.

CREE.

Algonkian.

About 12,000 in Manitoba, and some

5000 in Saskatchewan, Alberta,

Keewatin, &c.

Large element of

French, Scottish

and E n g I i s h

blood.

Slow but steady progress (except

with a few hands). Catholics,

Methodists and Anglicans strongly

represented by missions and church

members; many Presbyterians

also.

Writings of Petitot, Lacombe, Horden,

Bell, Watkins, Evans, Young, &c.;

Lacombe, Diet. de la langue des Cris

(1876); Russell, Explor. in the Far

North (1898); Stewart, Ann. Arch.

Rep. Ontario, 1905; Maclean, Canad.

Say. Folk (1890).

CREEK.

Muskogian.

11,000 in Oklahoma.

Large element of

white b I o o d;

some negro.

American citizens, making good

progress. Various religious

faiths.

Gatschet, Migration Legend the

Creeks (1884-1888); Speck, Mem.

Amer. Anthrop. Assoc., 1907.

CROWS

(Absaroka).

Siouan.

1804 at Crow Agency, Montana.

Little.

Improving industrially and financi-

ally. Morals still bad.

Simms, Publ. Field Columb. Mus.,

1903; Schultz, My Life as an Indian

(N.Y., 1907).

DAKOTA

(Santee, Yankton,

Teton - Sioux).

Siouan.

About 18,000 in South and 4400 in

North Dakota; 3200 in Montana;

900 in Minnesota. Seemingly

decreasing.

Considerable white

blood, varying

with different sec-

tions.

Capable of and making good pro-

gress. Episcopal, Catholic, Con-

gregational missions with good re-

suits.

Writings of Dorsey, Riggs, Eastman,

&c. Riggs, Contrib. N. Amer.

Ethnol., vol. vii., 1890, and vol. ix.,

1893; Wissler, Journ. Amer. Folk-

Lore, 1907; Eastman, Indian Boy-

hood (1902).

DELAWARE.

Algonkian.

In Oklahoma, 800 with Cherokee

and 90 with Wichita; 164 with

Six Nations in Ontario.

Considerable.

Oklahoma, Delaware, U.S. citizens,

and progressing; Canadians making

also good progress.

Brinton, Lendpe and their Legends

(Phila., 1885), and Essays of an

Americanist (1890); Nelson, Indians

New Jersey (1894).

Doc-R1ns.

Athabaskan.

About 10.00 in the region E. of the

Hares, to Back river, N.W.

Little.

"Wild and indolent," not yet much

under white influence.

See Chipewyans, Carriers.

Canada.

(Greenland).

Eskimoan.

West coast, 10,500; East coast, 500.

Slowly increasing.

Large element of

white blood, esti-

mated already in

More or less "civilized" and "Chris-

tian" as result of Moravian mis-

sions.

Writings of Rink, Holm, Nansen,

Peary. Rink, Tales and Trad. of

the Eskimo (Lond., 1875) and Eskimo

1855 at 30%.

Tribes (1887); Nansen, Eskimo Life

(1893); Thalbitzer, Eskimo Language

(1904).

Eskimoan.

About 1300.

Considerable on

Much improvement due to Moravian

Packard, Amer. Naturalist, if85;

(Labrador).

S.E. coast.

and (later) other Protestant mis-

sions.

Turner, rrth Ann. Rep. Bur. Ethnol.,

1889-1890.

TRIBES]

Tribe.

Stock.

Situation, Population, &c.

Degree of

Intermixture.

Condition, Progress, &c.

Authorities.

ESKIMO

(central regions).

Eskimoan.

About 2500.

Little.

Not much improvement except here

and there. Some reached by

Boas, 61/s Ann. Rep. Bur. Ethnol.,

188 4 -1885, and Bull. Amer. Nat.

Episcopalian mission.

Hist., 1901 and 1908.

(Mackenzie, &c.).

Eskimoan.

About 1500.

Little.

Not much improvement. Reached

by Catholic missions.

Petitot, Les Grands Esquimaux

(1887), Monographie des Esquimaux

Tchiglit (Paris, 1876) and other

writings; Stefinsson, Harper's

Magazine, 1908-1909.

Eskimoan.

About 12,000, exclusive of Aleuts.

Considerableoncer-

Much improvement in parts since

Dall, Contrib. N. Amer. Ethnol., vol.

(Alaska).

tain parts of coast.

introduction of reindeer in 1892.

i., 1877; Murdoch, 9th Rep.

Presbyterian, Methodist, Catholic,

Moravian, Baptist, Swedish Evan-

gelical, Quaker, Congregational,

Lutheran missions now at work.

Bur. Ethnol., 1887-1888; and Nelson,

18th Rep., 1896-1897; Barnum, Innuit

Gramm. and Dict. (1901).

ESKIMO

Eskimoan.

About 1200.

Little.

Little improvement.

Hooper, Tents of the Tuski (1853);

(N.E. Asia).

Dall, Amer. Naturalist (1881). See

Eskimo (Alaska).

FLATHEADS.

Salishan.

615 at Flathead Agency, Montana.

Considerable.

Continued Improvement. Catholic

missions.

McDermott, Journ. Amer. Folk-Lore,

1901; Ronan, Flathead Indians

(1890).

Gos1UTE.

Shoshonian.

About zoo in Utah.

Little.

Some improvement in last few years.

Chamberlin, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci.

Phila., 1908. See Paiute, Ute.

GROSVENTRES

Algonkian.

558 at Ft. Belknap Agency, Mon-

Little.

Law-abiding, industrious and fast

Kroeber, Anthrop. Pap. Amer. Mus.

(Atsina).

tana.

becoming more moral. Catholic,

chief mission influence, also Pres-

byterian.

Nat. Hist., 1907-1908.

HAIDA.

Haidan.

About 600 on Queen Charlotte Is.,

and 300 in Alaska. Decreasing.

.

Some little.

Now "gradually advancing along

the lines of civilization." Mission

influences Methodists and Angli-

can, with much success, especially

former.

Swanton, Contrib. to Ethnol. of the

Haida (1905) and other writings;

Boas, Rep. Brit. Assoc. Adv. Sci.,

1889; Newcombe, Congr. intern. des

Amer (Quebec, 1906).

HANKUT'QIN.

Athabaskan.

About 400 on the Yukon, above the

Kotlo, in Alaska.

Little, if any.

Not yet much under white or mis-

sionary influence.

See Babines.

HARES.

Athabaskan.

About 600 W. of Gt. Bear Lake to

Eskimo country, in N.W. Canada.

Little.

"Wild and indolent," with little

improvement. Reached by Catho-

lic missions.

See Babines, Carriers, Chipewyan.

HAVASUPAI.

Yuman.

166 N. of Prescott in N.W. Arizona.

Decreasing.

Little.

"Good workers"; not yet distinctly

under mission influence.

James, Indians the Painted Desert

Region (Boston, 1903); Dorsey,

Indians the South-west (1903).

HIDATSA.

Siouan.

467 near Ft. Berthold, N. Dakota.

Little.

Making good progress. Congrega-

tional and Catholic missions. ,

Matthews, Ethnogr. and Philol. the

Hidatsa (1877); McGee, 15th Ann.

Rep. Bur. Etlznol., 1893-1894; Pepper

and Wilson, Mem. Amer. Anthrop.

Assoc., 1908.

HUPA.

Athabaskan.

420 in Hoopa Valley, N.E. Cali-

fornia.

Little.

Self-supporting by agriculture and

stock-raising. Presbyterian and

Episcopal missions with good

results.

Goddard, Life and Culture of the

Hupa (1903), Hupa Texts (1904),

and other writings.

HURONS OF

LORETTE.

Iroquoian.

466 at Lorette, near the city of

Quebec. Increasing, but losing

somewhat by emigration.

Nopure-bloodsleft.

Practically civilized. All Catholics,

except one Anglican and six Pres-

byterians.

Gerin, Rep. Brit. Assoc. Adv. Sci.,

2900.

.

IOWA.

Siouan.

246 in Kansas; 88 in Oklahoma.

Holding their own.

Considerable.

In 1906 " accomplished more on

their allotments than at any time

heretofore." One regular mis-

sionary.

Dorsey, Trans. Anthrop. Soc. Wash.,

1883, and 15th Ann. Rep. Bur.

Ethnol., 1893-1894; also 11th Rep.

IROQUOIS

(of Caughnawaga).

Iroquoian.

2075 at Caughnawaga, in S.W.

Quebec (largely Mohawk). In-

creasing.

Few, if any, pure-

bloods left.

Practically civilized and making fair

progress. Chiefly Catholics, but

there is a Methodist school.

Rep. Dept. Ind. Aff. Canada,

1907.

IROQUOIS

(of Lake of Two

Mountains).

Iroquoian.

395 at Lake of Two Mountains,

Quebec.

Few, if any, pure-

bloods left.

Practically civilized and making fair

progress. Catholics and Methodists

represented.

Cuoq, Lexique de la langue iroquoise

(1882), and other writings.

IROQUOIS

(of St Regis).

Iroquoian.

1449 at St Regis, Quebec; 1208 at

St Regis, New York.

Few pure-bloods

left.

Practically all civilized and making

fair progress.

Ann. Rep. Dept. Ind. All. Canada,

1907.

IROQUOIS

(of Watha).

Iroquoian.

About 65 at Watha (formerly

Gibson), near the southern end of

Considerable.

Industrious and progressive. In-

fluence of Methodist mission.

Ann. Rep. Dept. Ind. All. Canada,

1907.

Lake Muskoka, Ontario.

IROQUOIS

Iroquoian.

94 near St Albert, Alberta

"Indians only in

Practically civilized; outlook promis-

Chamberlain, Amer. Anthrop., 1904.

(of St Albert).

(" Michel's band").

name," no pure-

bloods left.

ing. Catholics.

JICARILLA

Athabaskan.

784 in New Mexico. Decreasing.

Little.

Improvement during past few years.

Mooney, Amer. Anthrop., 1898. See

(Apache).

Apache.

KAIBAB.

Shoshonian.

About loo in S.W. Utah. Decreas-

ing.