. Bulletin. Ethnology. 510 SEPON SEQU O Y A [b. a. e. Sepon. See Siipawn. Sepori. A former Pima settlement in Arizona, s. of Gila r., probal)ly near the Sonora boundary. It contained 80 fam- ilies in 1871. Sepori.—Kudo Ensayo (ca. 1763), 162, 1863. So- pori,—Ibid., 193. Topony.—Ind. Aff. Rep. 1871, 365, 1872 (misprint). Seppock. See Shoe-pack. Sequallisere. See Sequareesere. Sequan. A small Diegueno band in Sweetwater canyon, 20 m. from San Diego, s. Cal.; pop. 50"in 1888, 35 in 1891. The name is now given to a reservation of 640 acres, largely of non-arable land, 110 m. from Mission Tule


. Bulletin. Ethnology. 510 SEPON SEQU O Y A [b. a. e. Sepon. See Siipawn. Sepori. A former Pima settlement in Arizona, s. of Gila r., probal)ly near the Sonora boundary. It contained 80 fam- ilies in 1871. Sepori.—Kudo Ensayo (ca. 1763), 162, 1863. So- pori,—Ibid., 193. Topony.—Ind. Aff. Rep. 1871, 365, 1872 (misprint). Seppock. See Shoe-pack. Sequallisere. See Sequareesere. Sequan. A small Diegueno band in Sweetwater canyon, 20 m. from San Diego, s. Cal.; pop. 50"in 1888, 35 in 1891. The name is now given to a reservation of 640 acres, largely of non-arable land, 110 m. from Mission Tule River Agency, with 34 people in 1909. Saquan.—H. R. Ex. Doc. 76, 34th Cong, 8d sess., 133, 1857. Sequan.—Jackson and Kinney, Rep. Inds., 28, 1883. Sycuan.—Ind. Aff. Rep., n, 72, 1891. Syquan.—Ibid., 1902, 175, 1903. Sequareesa, Sequaresere. See Saghwa- reesa. Sequareesere. An Onondaga chief who joined in a message to Pennsylvania in 1753, was at a treaty in Montreal in 1756, and a council at Ft Johnson, N. Y., in 1757. In Aug. 1759 he was mentioned at Oswego as old Saquerisera, an Onon- daga sachem. He signed the treaty nego- tiated at Ft Stanwix in 1768, and his name appears in Weiser's list, under the form Achseyquarresery, of those in au- thority in 1752 (Minutes Prov. Coun. Pa., v, 686, 1852-56). In 1750 Cammerhoff called him Sequallisere. Cf. Sag]i)V((7-eesa, Sakarism. (w. m. b.) Sequidongquee. A famous Seneca chief of the period of the American Revolution, called also Little Beard, and living at Little Beard's town, now Cuylerville, Livingston co., N. Y. His successor in- herited both names, and the two can not alwavs be distinguished. Their names appear on the treaties of 1790, 1797,1815, and 1826, in various forms, as Shecanach- weschegue, Saheoquiaudonqui, Sigwiiah- sohgwih, Checanadughtwo, etc. The In- dian name may belong to the later chief alone, who is described as having been be- low the medium height, and a fluent speaker. (w. m. b. ) Sequ


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