Ohio Archological And Historical Quarterly volume 29

Cover Ohio Archological And Historical Quarterly volume 29
Ohio Archological And Historical Quarterly volume 29
Ohio State Archaeological And Historical Society
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55, note.
8i. Pied Froid, who was of a pusillanimous nature, and appears to have been faithful to neither the French nor the English.
82. See Researches, vol. II, p. 6;^.
83. Most probably for Goiogouen, the name of the Cayugas, one of the Six Nations. — Shea's Jogues' New Netherlands, p. 48.
84. He had succeeded the Marquis de la Galissoniere as Governor-General of New France.
85. It is here difficult to determine what tribe of Indians is here meant ; but it could not have been that which is n
...ow known as the Flat-Heads.
86. French, Les chats, loutres, et peeous (or pecous. ) I am at a loss to know what animal is meant by the last term. That the French word chat, commonly translated wild cat, means rather a raccoon will appear, I think, from the following: The name of Lake Erie and the tribe of Indians that once inhabited its shores, is derived from the Huron word Tiron ; or Tu-era-kak, the Onondaga name of the raccoon. Contrast the two subjoined passages. Dr. O'Callaghan says: "There is in one of these islands" — in the western end of Lake Erie — "so great a num- ber of cats that the Indians killed as many as nine hundred of them in a very short time.


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