. Bulletin. Ethnology. BULL. 30] POOSE-BACK POPE 281 s. w. by w. from Concha, and so seems to have been in the s. w. corner of Kemper CO., Mii^s., though possibly in Neshobaco. Pooscoos te Kale.—Romans, Florida, 311, 1775. Rooskoos Tokali—Ibid., map. Poose-back. A word reported as used in w. Connecticut to designate the Indian woman's manner of carrying a child on the back (Babbitt, Dial. Notes, 342,189-1); from pappoose. The second component is the English back. (a. p. c.) Poosepatuck. Also called Uncachogue. Oneof the 13 tribesof LongIsland,N. Y., probably subordinate to the Montauk. They oc


. Bulletin. Ethnology. BULL. 30] POOSE-BACK POPE 281 s. w. by w. from Concha, and so seems to have been in the s. w. corner of Kemper CO., Mii^s., though possibly in Neshobaco. Pooscoos te Kale.—Romans, Florida, 311, 1775. Rooskoos Tokali—Ibid., map. Poose-back. A word reported as used in w. Connecticut to designate the Indian woman's manner of carrying a child on the back (Babbitt, Dial. Notes, 342,189-1); from pappoose. The second component is the English back. (a. p. c.) Poosepatuck. Also called Uncachogue. Oneof the 13 tribesof LongIsland,N. Y., probably subordinate to the Montauk. They occupied the s. shore from Patch- ogue E. to the Shinnecock country. In 1666 a reservation was ceded to their. POOSEPATUCK WOMAN. SPECK, PHOTO. sachem, Tubaccus, on Forge r., a short distance above the town of Mastic, where a few mixed-bloods still survive, with no kn(jwledge of their language or customs, on a state reservation of 50 acres. Eliza- beth Joe, their woman sachem and last chief, died in 1832. In 1890 they num- bered 10 families, governed by 3 trustees. See Pati'Iioaij. (f. g. s. ) • Pooshapukanuk. A former Choctaw set- tlement, including Mt Dexter, probably in INIarion Miss. It was the scene of the treaty of Nov. 16, 1805.—Am. State Papers, Ind. Aff., i, 749, 1832. Pope (Po-pe). A celebrated Te wa medi- cine-man, native of thepuebloof San Juan, who firstappoars in New Mexico history in 1675 as a leader either of some prisoners charged with witchcraft, and with killing several missionaries, or of a party that visited the Spanish governor at Santa Fe in that year demanding their release. Later making Taos the seat of his efforts, he quietly preached the doctrine of in- dependence of Spanish authority and the restoration of the old Pueblo life, which developed into a plot to murder or drive from the country the 2,400 Spanish colo- nists and priests. Chief among Pope's adherents were Catiti of Santo Domingo, Tupatu of Picuris, and Jaca of Taos. The plot quic


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