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Tunica Indian Tribe
Location
Tunica. Meaning "the people," or "those who are the people."
Also called:
Yoron, their own name.
Connections
They were the leading tribe of
the Tunica group of the Tunican stock, the latter including also the Chitimacha and Atakapa.
Location
On the lower course of Yazoo
River, on the south side about 4 French leagues from its mouth. (See also
Arkansas.)
History
There is evidence that tribes
belonging to the Tunica group were encountered by De Soto west of the
Mississippi and very probably the name of the tribe is preserved in that of the
town of Tanico mentioned by Elvas (in Robertson, 1933), where people made salt,
for in later years we find the Tunica engaged in the making and selling of this
commodity. An early location for them on the eastern side of the Mississippi is
indicated by the "Tunica Oldfields" near Friar Point, not many miles below Helena, Ark.
The name appears on Marquette's map (1673) but there they are wrongly
placed. In 1682 La Salle and his companions learned of this tribe, then
located as given above, but neither he nor his lieutenant Tonti visited
them on this or any subsequent expedition, though they learned of Tunica
villages in the salt-making region of northeastern Louisiana. The Yazoo
town of the tribe was first seen, apparently, by three missionary priests
from Canada, one of whom, Father Davion, established himself among them in
1699. In 1702 he fled from his charges, but two or three years later was
induced by them to return, and he remained among them for about 15 years
more. In 1706 this tribe left the Yazoo and were received into the Houma
town nearly opposite the mouth of Red River, but later, according to La
Harpe (1831), they rose upon their hosts and killed more than half of
them, and for a long period they continued to live in the region they had
thus appropriated. They Were firm friends of the French and rendered them
invaluable service in all difficulties with the tribes higher up, and
particularly against the Natchez, but in 1719 or 1720 Davion was so much
discouraged at the Meager results of his efforts that he left them. The
anger excited against them by their support of the French resulted in an
attack by a large party of Natchez and their allies in 1731 in which both
sides suffered severely and the head chief of the Tunica was killed. The Tunica remained in the same region until some time
between 1784 at 1803, when they moved up Red River and settled close to
the present
Marksville, La., on the land the Avoyel Indian village which they claimed
to have bought from Avoyel tribe. Before this event took place in
company with the Ofo, Avoyel and some Choctaw, they
attacked the pirogues of a British expedition ascending the Mississippi,
killed six men, wounded seven, and compelled the rest to turn back. A few
families descended from the Tunica are still settled on the site
just mentioned, which forms a small reservation. Sibley (1832) says
that in his time Tunica had settled among the Atakapa, and it was
perhaps some of their descendants of whom Dr. Gatschet heard as
living near Beaumont, Tex., about 1886. Mooney (1928) learned of some Tunica
families in the southern part of the Choctaw Nation, Okla., but they had
lost their old language.
Population
Mooney (1828) estimated
that in 1650 the total population of the Tunica, Yazoo, Koroa, and Ofo was
2,000, and this very figure, except that it does not include the Koroa, is given
by the missionary De Montigny in 1699. My own figure for the same date is
somewhat higher, 2,450, out of which I estimate about 1,575 were Tunics. In 1719
the the number of Tunica was conjectured to be 460
and in 1803, 50 to 60, through a second statement of about the same
period gives 25 warriors. Morse (1822) reports 30 Tunica in Louisiana.
The census of 1910 gives 43 Tunica in all, but among some Indians of
other tribes and there were many mixed bloods. The census of 1930 gives
only 1, he being the only one who could speak the old language.
Connections in which they have
become noted
The Tunica were prominent in
history
(1) from the fact their language was the principal dialect of a stock on the lower
Mississippi which received
its name from them,
(2) for their sedentary character,
(3)
devotion to the French interest and their part in the Natchez wars,
(4) from the perpetuation of a their name in Tunica County, and
Tunica Oldfields, Miss., and a post village of the name in West
Feliciana Parish, La.
Resources:
Notes About the Book:
Source: The Indian Tribes of North America, by John R. Swanton, 1953, Bureau of
American Ethnology, Bulletin 145, US Government Printing Office, Washington DC.
Online Publication: The manuscript was scanned and then ocr'd. Minimal editing
has been done, and readers can and should expect some errors in the textual
output.
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