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CATAWBAS (from the See also: North See also: American See also: Indians of Siouan stock; formerly the dominant See also: people of See also: South Carolina
.
Some of their divisions extended into North Carolina
.
They are now almost See also: extinct, but were at one See also: time able to send nearly 2000 " braves " into See also: battle
.
In the American War of Independence they furnished a valuable contingent to the South Carolina troops
.
They then occupied a number of small towns on the See also: Catawba See also: river, but they after-wards leased their See also: land and' removed to the territory of the Cherokees, with whom they had been formerly at war
.
There, however, they did not long remain, but returned to a reservation in their See also: original See also: district
.
Their See also: affinities have not been very clearly made out, and by See also: Albert See also: Gallatin they were grouped with the Cherokees, Choctaws, Muskogees and See also: Natchez
.
A vocabulary of sixty of their words was published by Horatio See also: Hale in vol. ii. of the Transactions of the American Ethnological Society in 1848; and a much See also: fuller list—about Soo—collected by Oscar M
.
See also: Lieber, the geologist, in 1856, made its appearance in vol. ii. of Collections of the South Carolina See also: Historical Society, 1858, Of the one See also: hundred Catawbas still said to be surviving, few, if any, can claim to be full-blooded
.
They are in the Catawba Reservation in See also: York county, South Carolina
.
The name is See also: familiar in connexion with the See also: white American
See also: wine, the praises of which have been sung by Longfellow
.
The See also: grape from which the wine is obtained was first discovered about 18o r, near the See also: banks of the Catawba river, and named by Major Adlum in 1828, but it is now cultivated extensively in See also: Illinois, See also: Ohio and New York, and especially on the shores of Lake See also: Erie
.
See also Handbook of American Indians ( See also: Washington, 1907)
.
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