. Bulletin. Ethnology. 216 CATAWBA CATHLAMET [b. a. e. ris.âChauvig-nerie (1736), ibid., ix, 1057, 1855. Usheree.âBvrd (1728), Hist, of Dividing Line, I, 181,1866. Usherie.âLederer (1670), Diseov.,27,1672 (from iawaherc, 'river down here'). TTsherys.â Ibid., 17. Catawba.âA grape, or the wine pro- duced from it, made famous by Long- fellow in one of his poems. This grape is a cultivated variety of the northern fox- grape ( Vitis lahrusca) and is said to have been named by Maj. Adlum, in 1825, after the Catawba tribe and r. of North Caro- lina, (a. f. c. ) Catawissa.âProbablyaConoy village, as C


. Bulletin. Ethnology. 216 CATAWBA CATHLAMET [b. a. e. ris.âChauvig-nerie (1736), ibid., ix, 1057, 1855. Usheree.âBvrd (1728), Hist, of Dividing Line, I, 181,1866. Usherie.âLederer (1670), Diseov.,27,1672 (from iawaherc, 'river down here'). TTsherys.â Ibid., 17. Catawba.âA grape, or the wine pro- duced from it, made famous by Long- fellow in one of his poems. This grape is a cultivated variety of the northern fox- grape ( Vitis lahrusca) and is said to have been named by Maj. Adlum, in 1825, after the Catawba tribe and r. of North Caro- lina, (a. f. c. ) Catawissa.âProbablyaConoy village, as Conyngham (Day, Penn.,243, 1843) says the Conoy "had a wigwam on the Cata- wese at Catawese, now Catawissa," in Columbia co., Pa. The name is probably derived from Piseatawese, a later desig- nation for the Conoy. Catawese.âConyngham, op. eit. Catfish Lake. A Seminole settlement, with 28 inhabitants in 1880, on a small lake in Polk co., Fla., nearly midway between L. Pierce and L. Rosalie, toward the headwaters of Kissimmee r.âMac- Cauley in 5th Rep. B. A. E., 478, 1887. Catfish Village. A former settlement, probably of the Delawares, on Catfish run, a short distance N. of the site of Washington, Washington Pa.; so called, according to Day (Penn., 666, 1848), from a half-blood who settled there about the middle of the 18th century. See Royce in 18th Rep. B. A. E., pi. clx., 1900. Catherine's Town. A former Seneca village situated about the site of the present Catherine, N. Y., or, according to Conover, at Havana Glen. It took its name from Catherine Montour, a Cana- dian woman who was taken by the Iro- quois and afterward became the chief matron in her clan. It was destroyed by Sullivan in 1779. (.t. n. b. h.) Catharine Town.â.Tones (1780) in N. Y. Doc. Col. Hist., VIII, 785, 1S57. Catherine Town.âPember- ton (ca. 1792) in Mass. Hist. Soc. Coll., s., ii, 177, 1810. French Catharinestown.âMachin (1779) quoted by Conover. K'aiu-sadagaand Geneva MS.,


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