. Bulletin. Ethnology. 774 LONGE LORETTE [b. a. h. Kiowa first agreed to be placed on a res- ervation. In 1872 he headed a delegation to Washington. The killing of his son by the Texans in 1873 embittered him against the whites, and in the outbreak of the following year he was the recog- nized leader of the hostile part of the tribe. On the surrender in the spring of 1875 he, with a numl)er of others, was sent to military (confinement at Ft Ma- rion, Fla., where they remained 3 years. He died in 1879, shortly after his return, and was succeeded by his adopted son, of the same name, who still r


. Bulletin. Ethnology. 774 LONGE LORETTE [b. a. h. Kiowa first agreed to be placed on a res- ervation. In 1872 he headed a delegation to Washington. The killing of his son by the Texans in 1873 embittered him against the whites, and in the outbreak of the following year he was the recog- nized leader of the hostile part of the tribe. On the surrender in the spring of 1875 he, with a numl)er of others, was sent to military (confinement at Ft Ma- rion, Fla., where they remained 3 years. He died in 1879, shortly after his return, and was succeeded by his adopted son, of the same name, who still retains author- ity in the tril)e. (j. m. ). Longe. An abbreviation in common use among English-speaking people of the region of the great lakes, particu- larly the N. shore of L. Ontario, for mas- kalonge, a variant of maskinonge (q. v.). The form lunge represents another vari- ant, muskdunge. The name is applied also to the Great Lake trout (Salvelinus nnmaucusli). See^Mackinaw. (a. f. c.) Long Island (Amaiiel'i-gundhVta, from dmdye'U 'island', gundhl'ta 'long'). A former Cherokee town at the Long id. in r., on the Tennessee-Georgia line. It was settled in 1782 by Chero- kee who espoused the British cause in the Revolutionary war, and was known as one of the Chickamauga towns. It was destroyed in the fall of 179-4. See Royce in 5th Rep. B. A. E., map, 1887; Moonev in 19th Rep. B. A. E., 508, 526, 1900. â (j. M.) Long Lake. A former Chippewa village on Long lake, in Bayfield co., N. Wis.â Warren (1852) in Minn. Hist. Soc. Coll., V, 191, 1885. Long Lake. A Chippewa band on Long lake, N. of L. Superior, between Nipegon lake and Pic r., Ontario; pop. 311 in 1884, 341 in 1904. Long Sioux. The chief of one of the Dakota bands not brought into Ft Peck agencv, Mont., in 1872 (H. R. Ex. Doc. 96, 42(1 Cong., 3d sess., 5, 1873). It had 28 tipis. Not identified. Long Tail. In 1854 a Shawnee chief of this name ruled a band at " Long Tail's settlement" in Johnson co.,


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