Padouca
Michael McCafferty
mmccaffe at indiana.edu
Thu Apr 28 18:40:37 UTC 2005
One more brief thought:
This name is also seen in the Illinois Country in the 1700s. I would have to
dig around, but I'm pretty sure there was a Marie Padouca at Kaskaskia, among
a few others with this name.
Michael
Quoting Rory M Larson <rlarson at unlnotes.unl.edu>:
> Good catch, Ardis! I got this off a web site for the town:
>
>
> The site was chosen by George Rogers Clark during the Revolution and the
> first settlers probably arrived around 1821. The early settlement was
> known as Pekin. In 1827 the town was laid out by Clark's brother William
> who selected the name Paducah to honor the legendary Chickasaw leader,
> Chief Paduke (or it may be the name of a group of Comanches known as the
> Padoucas).
>
>
>
>
>
> I'm inclined to suspect that the Chickasaw Chief Paduke is
> probably the basis for the name here. In any case, it seems
> to be an arbitrary name, like one would expect the founders
> of a town to come up with. If it does refer to the Padoucas,
> it is probably coming through the English of the western frontier,
> and not through local Algonquian.
>
> Rory
>
>
>
>
>
> are2 at buffalo.edu
> Sent by:
> owner-siouan at list To
> s.colorado.edu siouan at lists.colorado.edu
> cc
>
> 04/27/2005 07:52 Subject
> PM Re: Padouca
>
>
> Please respond to
> siouan at lists.colo
> rado.edu
>
>
>
>
>
>
> For what it's worth, there is a Padukah, Kentucky. (All quilters know
> this, it is the holy grail of quilting.)
> That's a bit East.
>
> >
> > SOMEbody used the name a lot earlier: in the first decade of the 18c.
> > we
> > have French Panetonka and Panetoca, and in 1718 "Pays des Apaches et
> > des
> > Padoucas".
> >
> > Alan
> >
> >
>
>
>
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