- Camp
Fremont aside Mariposa Cr**** with six tribes. However, as the
Ahwahneechees and
Chowchillas were
absent from the talks, a
military campaign was...
- July 4, 2022.
Retrieved April 19, 2022. Bingaman, John W. (1966). "The
Ahwahneechees: A
Story of the
Yosemite Indians". yosemite.ca.us.
Archived from the...
- 1912, p. 118. Mazel, p. 97 Mazel, p. 100 Bingaman, John W. (1966). The
Ahwahneechees: A
Story of the
Yosemite Indians (2004 online ed.).
Digitized by Dan...
- the
native people of
Yosemite Valley, the
Ahwahneechee, was
located at the base of the falls. The
Ahwahneechee people called the
waterfall "Cholock" ("the...
- Tenaya's
father was a
leader of the
Ahwahnechee people (or Awahnichi). The
Ahwahneechee had
become a
tribe distinct from the
other tribes in the area. Lafayette...
- light, it may not
reach the
ground directly below.
Because of this, the
Ahwahneechee Native Americans called this
waterfall "Pohono",
which means "Spirit...
- militia. Some
Native American tribes fought back,
beginning with the
Ahwahneechees and the
Chowchilla in the
Sierra Nevada and San
Joaquin Valley leading...
-
Battalion doctor Lafayette Bunnell in his 1892 book.
Bunnell reports that
Ahwahneechee Chief Tenaya explained to him, forty-one
years earlier, in 1851, that...
-
Tenaya Lake was
named for
Chief Tenaya,
leader of the
Ahwahneechee tribe that
originally lived in
Yosemite Valley...
-
themselves the Ah-wah-ne-chee,
meaning "dwellers in Ahwahnee." The
Ahwahneechees were
decimated by a
disease in
about 1800, and left the valley, although...