The Composition of Indian Geographical Names - Illustrated from the Algonkin Languages by J. Hammond (James Hammond) Trumbull
page 43 of 83 (51%)
page 43 of 83 (51%)
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_Winne-ashim-ut_, 'at the good spring,' near Romney Marsh, is now Chelsea, Mass. The name appears in deeds and records as Winnisimmet, Winisemit, Winnet Semet, etc. The author of the 'New English Canaan' informs us (book 2, ch. 8), that "At _Weenasemute_ is a water, the virtue whereof is, to cure barrennesse. The place taketh his name of that fountaine, which signifieth _quick spring_, or _quickning spring_. Probatum." _Ashimuit_ or _Shumuit_, an Indian village near the line between Sandwich and Falmouth, Mass.,--_Shaume_, a neck and river in Sandwich (the _Chawum_ of Capt. John Smith?),--_Shimmoah_, an Indian village on Nantucket,--may all have derived their names from springs resorted to by the natives, as was suggested by the Rev. Samuel Deane in a paper in _Mass. Hist. Collections_, 2d Series, vol. x. pp. 173, 174. 6. MATTAPPAN, a participle of _mattappu_ (Chip. _namátabi_), 'he sits down,' denotes a 'sitting-down place,' or, as generally employed in local names, _the end of a portage_ between two rivers or from one arm of the sea to another,--where the canoe was launched again and its bearers re-embarked. Râle translates the Abnaki equivalent, _mata[n]be_, by 'il va au bord de l'eau,--a la grève pour s'embarquer,' and _meta[n]béniganik_, by 'au bout de delà du portage.' _Mattapan-ock_, afterwards shortened to _Mattapan_, that part of Dorchester Neck (South Boston) where "the west country people were set down" in 1630,[77] may have been so called because it was the end of a carrying place from South Bay to Dorchester Bay, across the narrowest part of the peninsula, or--as seems highly probable--because it was |
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