. Bulletin. Ethnology. 996 YEHL YENNIS [b. a. e. Yehl ('raven'). One of the two main divisions or phratries of the Tlingit (q. v.) of the Alaskan coast. (.i. k. s. ) Yehlnaas-hadai ( Ye^l na^as xd^dn-i, 'Ra- ven-house people'). A subdivision of the Yaku-lanas, a Haida family of the Raven clan, probably named from one house, although they occupied a large part of the town of Kweundlas.—Swanton, Cont. Haida, 272, 1905. Yatlnas: had'a'i.—Boas, Fifth Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., 26, 1889. Yehuh. According to Lewis and Clark (Exped., II, 472, 1814) a Chinookan tribe living in 1806 just above the Cas- ca
. Bulletin. Ethnology. 996 YEHL YENNIS [b. a. e. Yehl ('raven'). One of the two main divisions or phratries of the Tlingit (q. v.) of the Alaskan coast. (.i. k. s. ) Yehlnaas-hadai ( Ye^l na^as xd^dn-i, 'Ra- ven-house people'). A subdivision of the Yaku-lanas, a Haida family of the Raven clan, probably named from one house, although they occupied a large part of the town of Kweundlas.—Swanton, Cont. Haida, 272, 1905. Yatlnas: had'a'i.—Boas, Fifth Rep. N. W. Tribes Can., 26, 1889. Yehuh. According to Lewis and Clark (Exped., II, 472, 1814) a Chinookan tribe living in 1806 just above the Cas- cades of Columbia r. Nothing more is known of them. See Watlala. Wey-eh-hoo.—Gass. Journal, 1807, p. 199. Yehah.— Bancroft, Nat. Races, I, 317, 1874. Yehhuh.— Lewis and Clark Exped., ii, 236, 1814. Yekolaos. One of the two Cowichan tribes on Thetis id., off the s. e. coast of V^ancouver id., Brit. Col. If identical with the Tsussie of the Canadian Reports on Indian Affairs, the population was 53 in 1904. Tsussie.—Can. , 66,1902. Yeqolaos.— Boas, MS., , 1887. Yellow Lake. A Chippewa village, es- tablished about 1740 on Yellow lake, Burnett Wis.—Warren (1852) in Minn. Hist. Soc. Coll., v, 171, 1885. _ Yellow Liver Band. An unidentified Sioux band, named from its chief, and numbering 60 lodges when brought to Ft Peck agency in Aug. 1872.—H. R. Ex. Doc. 96, 42d Cong., 3d sess., 15, 1873. Yellow Thunder ( Wa-kun-cJia-hjo-kah). A Winnebago chief, said to have been born in 1774, died in 1874. Prior to 1840 the Winnebago occupied the country sur- rounding L. Winnebago and Green bay. Wis. When it was determined to remove the Indians to a new reservation in n. e. Iowa and s. e. Minnesota, Yellow Thun- der, with others of his tribe, was per- suaded to visit Washington and "get acquainted with the Great ; Here, on Nov. 1,1837, they were induced to sign a treaty ceding to the United States all their lands e. of the Mississippi, and pro
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