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distinct bands or subtribes: Kewevkepaya, Gwev G’paaya (southeastern)
Tolkepaya,
Tolkepaye (western) Wipukepa,
Wiipukpaa (northeastern), also
known as...
- dialects: Kwevkepaya, Wipukpaya,
Tolkepaya, and Yavepe.
Linguistic studies of the
Kwevkepaya (Southern),
Tolkepaya (Western),
Wipukepa (Verde Valley)...
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Salome (locally /səˈloʊm/,
Tolkepaya Yavapai: Wiltaika) is an
unincorporated community and census-designated
place (CDP) in La Paz County, Arizona, United...
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Native Americans who,
according to
historian Brian McGinty, were
likely Tolkepaya, of the Yavapai, in what is now Arizona. Mary Ann and her
sister Olive...
-
American tribe.
Though she
identified them as Apache, they were most
likely Tolkepayas (Western Yavapai).[citation needed] They
killed her
parents and 4 siblings...
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Illinois girl who was
captured and
enslaved by Indians,
probably from the
Tolkepayas tribe,
during her
pioneer family's m****acre
while on
their journey westward...
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Arizona Yavapai Kwevkepaya (Southern Yavapai), south-central
Arizona Tolkepaya (Western Yavapai),
western Arizona Wipukepa (Northeastern Yavapai), north-central...
- diminished,
Tolkepaya saw that they
needed to make new
alliances to
protect their safety. In
April 1863, Quashackama, a well-known
Tolkepaya, met with Arizona...
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often incorrectly called Yavapai Apaches or Yuma Apaches. The Ɖo:lkabaya (
Tolkepaya), the
southwestern group of Yavapai, and the
Hualapai (also belonging...
-
could not remember. 18 March, 1851
Olive and Mary Ann
Oatman Apache or
Tolkepayas warriors the
banks of the Gila
River 84
miles east of Yuma,
Arizona 14...