YANMAR AMERICA CORP. Industrial Diesel Engines and Generators North American Distributor and Dealer Directory

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

YANMAR AMERICA CORP. Industrial Diesel Engines and Generators North American Distributor and Dealer Directory YANMAR AMERICA CORP. Industrial Diesel Engines and Generators North American Distributor and Dealer Directory February 2008 INTRODUCTION YANMAR AMERICA SERVICE NETWORK Yanmar America Corp. is committed to providing you, our diesel industrial engine customer, with the finest in prod- ucts and services. In keeping with that commitment, Yanmar America Corp. has established a service network of Yanmar distributors and Yanmar dealers to meet your needs for genuine Yan- mar parts and quality service. The Yanmar distributor is the central figure in each terri- tory and distributes Yanmar engines and genuine Yanmar parts to the Yanmar dealer network in the territory. The Yanmar distributor can also assist you with technical and warranty information. We have published this directory to assist you in locating the Yanmar distributor and/or Yanmar dealer in your area. You may also locate your nearest Yanmar distributor by visiting the Yanmar America Corp. website: www.yanmar.com 0208 TABLE OF CONTENTS Yanmar Distributor Map - United States ............................ 3 ALABAMA ........................................................................ 4 ALASKA ........................................................................... 4 ARKANSAS ..................................................................... 4 ARIZONA ......................................................................... 5 CALIFORNIA ................................................................... 5 COLORADO .................................................................... 6 CONNECTICUT ............................................................... 6 DELAWARE ..................................................................... 6 FLORIDA ......................................................................... 7 GEORGIA ........................................................................ 8 HAWAII ............................................................................ 8 IDAHO .............................................................................. 8 ILLINOIS .......................................................................... 9 INDIANA ........................................................................ 10 IOWA ............................................................................. 10 KANSAS ........................................................................ 10 KENTUCKY ................................................................... 10 LOUISIANA .................................................................... 11 MAINE ............................................................................ 11 MARYLAND ................................................................... 12 MASSACHUSETTS ....................................................... 12 MICHIGAN ..................................................................... 12 MINNESOTA .................................................................. 12 MISSISSIPPI .................................................................. 13 MISSOURI ..................................................................... 13 MONTANA ..................................................................... 14 NEBRASKA ................................................................... 14 NEVADA ........................................................................ 16 NEW HAMPSHIRE ........................................................ 16 NEW JERSEY ................................................................ 17 NEW MEXICO ............................................................... 17 NEW YORK ................................................................... 17 NORTH CAROLINA ....................................................... 18 NORTH DAKOTA .......................................................... 18 OHIO .............................................................................. 19 OKLAHOMA ................................................................... 20 OREGON ....................................................................... 20 Dealer and Distributor Directory 1 PENNSYLVANIA ........................................................... 20 RHODE ISLAND ............................................................ 20 SOUTH CAROLINA ....................................................... 21 SOUTH DAKOTA .......................................................... 21 TENNESSEE ................................................................. 21 TEXAS ........................................................................... 22 UTAH ............................................................................. 24 VERMONT ..................................................................... 25 VIRGINIA ....................................................................... 25 WASHINGTON .............................................................. 25 WEST VIRGINIA ............................................................ 25 WISCONSIN .................................................................. 25 WYOMING ..................................................................... 26 Yanmar Distributor Map - Canada .................................... 27 ALBERTA ...................................................................... 28 BRITISH COLUMBIA ..................................................... 28 MANITOBA .................................................................... 29 NEW BRUNSWICK ....................................................... 29 NEWFOUNDLAND AND LABRADOR ........................... 29 NORTHWEST TERRITORIES ...................................... 29 NOVA SCOTIA .............................................................. 29 ONTARIO ...................................................................... 29 QUEBEC ........................................................................ 30 SASKATCHEWAN ......................................................... 30 YUKON .......................................................................... 30 Yanmar Distributor Map - Mexico ..................................... 31 MEXICO DISTRIBUTOR LIST ....................................... 32 Yanmar FIE (Fuel Injection Equipment) Map - U.S. and Canada ................................................................ 33 FIE DISTRIBUTOR LIST ............................................... 34 2 Dealer and Distributor Directory YANMAR AUTHORIZED SERVICE - USA YANMAR DISTRIBUTOR MAP - UNITED STATES Dealer and Distributor Directory 3 YANMAR AUTHORIZED SERVICE - USA ALABAMA ALABAMA (Continued) Counties: Counties: Montgomery, Macon, Marshall, Baldwin, Mobile Marion, Marengo, Monroe, Distributor Limestone, Lee, Lawrence, Lauderdale, Lamar, Jackson, Laborde 74257 Highway 25 Morgan, Winston, Jefferson, Products Inc. Covington, LA 70435 Sumter, Lowndes, Wilcox, Phone: (985) 892-0107 Fax: (985) 892-7656 Houston, Walker, Tuscaloosa, www.labordeproducts.com Washington, Talladega, Perry, Shelby, St. Clair, Russell, Randolph, Pike, Pickens, Tallapoosa, Bullock, Coffee, ALASKA Cleburne, Clay, Clarke, Choctaw, Distributor Chilton, Colbert, Calhoun, Chambers, Blount, Bibb, Barbour, Cascade Diesel 9800 40th Ave. South Autauga, Henry, Madison, Engine, LLC Seattle, WA 98118 Phone: (800) 238-3850 Cherokee, Elmore, Hale, Butler, Fax: (206)764-3832 Conecuh, Geneva, Franklin, www.cascadeengine.com Fayette, Escambia, Greene, Cullman, Coosa, Covington, Dealers Etowah, Crenshaw, Dale, Dallas, Wilkie's Heavy 8820 King St. #A DeKalb Equipment Anchorage, AK 99515 Phone: (907) 344-9595 Distributor Fax: (907) 344-8500 www.wilkiesrepair.com Mastry Engine 2801 Anvil Street North Center St. Petersburg, FL 33710 Kachemak Gear 3625 East Rd. Phone: (727) 522-9471 Shed Homer, AK 99603 Fax: (727) 527-7013 Phone: (907) 235-8612 www.mastry.com Fax: (907) 235-7233 Dealers Timber & Marine 2547 Tongass Ave. Ketchikan, AK 99901 Just Russ Rental 7834 1st Ave North Phone: (907) 225-6644 LLC Birmingham, AL 35206 Fax: (907) 247-0644 Phone: (205) 833-6477 Fax: (205) 833-6465 www.justrussrental.com ARKANSAS Just Russ Rental 11937 Hwy 25 LLC Calera, AL 35040 Distributor Phone: (205) 668-3277 Fax: (205) 668-0415 Engines Inc. 5400 CW Post Road www.justrussrental.com P.O. Box 16660 Jonesboro, AR 72403 W.W. Williams 1350 Emory Fulmer Blvd. Phone: (870) 268-3700 Company Montgomery, AL 36110 Fax: (870) 268-3750 Phone: (334) 279-6083 www.enginespower.com Fax: (334) 279-6184 www.wwwilliams.com Dealers Producers 614 E. Cypress Brinkley Brinkley, AR 72021 Phone: (870) 734-2231 Fax: (870) 734-2631 4 Dealer and Distributor Directory YANMAR AUTHORIZED SERVICE - USA ARKANSAS (Continued) ARIZONA AG Pro England Hwy 165 North Distributors England, AR 72046 Phone: (501) 842-2524 W.W. Williams 2602 South 19th Ave. Fax: (501) 842-2407 Company Phoenix, AZ 85009 Phone: (602) 257-0561 Producers 1804 W. Martin Luther King Fax: (602) 233-1017 Helena Helena, AR 72342 Phone: (870) 338-3491 W.W. Williams 1375 W. Glenn Ave. Fax: (870) 338-3493 Company Tucson, AZ 85705 Distributor Phone: (520) 624-8377 Cox Imp Co. Hwy 63 South Branch Fax: (702) 399-2977 Hoxie, AR 72433 www.wwwilliams.com Phone: (870) 886-2291 Fax: (870) 886-7315 Producers 1255 Hwy 79 West CALIFORNIA Marianna Mariana, AR 72360 Phone: (870) 295-3438 Fax: (870) 295-3539 Distributors Greenway 304 Hwy 367 North Western Power 3800 Gate Way Ave. Newport Newport, AR 72112 Products Bakersfield, CA 93307 Phone: (870) 523-2781 Phone: (661) 397-9155 Fax: (870) 523-1059 Fax: (661) 397-9150 www.gogreenway.com www.westernpowerproducts .net Fry EQ Hwy 62 East Piggott,
Recommended publications
  • Perspectives of Saskatchewan Dakota/Lakota Elders on the Treaty Process Within Canada.” Please Read This Form Carefully, and Feel Free to Ask Questions You Might Have
    Perspectives of Saskatchewan Dakota/Lakota Elders on the Treaty Process within Canada A Dissertation Submitted to the College of Graduate Studies and Research In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy In Interdisciplinary Studies University of Saskatchewan Saskatoon By Leo J. Omani © Leo J. Omani, copyright March, 2010. All rights reserved. PERMISSION TO USE In presenting this thesis in partial fulfillment of the requirements for a Postgraduate degree from the University of Saskatchewan, I agree that the Libraries of this University may make it freely available for inspection. I further agree that permission for copying of the thesis in any manner, in whole or in part, for scholarly purposes may be granted by the professor or professors who supervised my thesis work or, in their absence, by the Head of the Department or the Dean of the College in which my thesis was completed. It is understood that any copying or publication or use of this thesis or parts thereof for financial gain is not to be allowed without my written permission. It is also understood that due recognition shall be given to me and to the University of Saskatchewan in any scholarly use which may be made of any material in my thesis. Request for permission to copy or to make other use of material in this thesis, in whole or part should be addressed to: Graduate Chair, Interdisciplinary Committee Interdisciplinary Studies Program College of Graduate Studies and Research University of Saskatchewan Room C180 Administration Building 105 Administration Place Saskatoon, Saskatchewan Canada S7N 5A2 i ABSTRACT This ethnographic dissertation study contains a total of six chapters.
    [Show full text]
  • History of Virginia
    14 Facts & Photos Profiles of Virginia History of Virginia For thousands of years before the arrival of the English, vari- other native peoples to form the powerful confederacy that con- ous societies of indigenous peoples inhabited the portion of the trolled the area that is now West Virginia until the Shawnee New World later designated by the English as “Virginia.” Ar- Wars (1811-1813). By only 1646, very few Powhatans re- chaeological and historical research by anthropologist Helen C. mained and were policed harshly by the English, no longer Rountree and others has established 3,000 years of settlement even allowed to choose their own leaders. They were organized in much of the Tidewater. Even so, a historical marker dedi- into the Pamunkey and Mattaponi tribes. They eventually cated in 2015 states that recent archaeological work at dissolved altogether and merged into Colonial society. Pocahontas Island has revealed prehistoric habitation dating to about 6500 BCE. The Piscataway were pushed north on the Potomac River early in their history, coming to be cut off from the rest of their peo- Native Americans ple. While some stayed, others chose to migrate west. Their movements are generally unrecorded in the historical record, As of the 16th Century, what is now the state of Virginia was but they reappear at Fort Detroit in modern-day Michigan by occupied by three main culture groups: the Iroquoian, the East- the end of the 18th century. These Piscataways are said to have ern Siouan and the Algonquian. The tip of the Delmarva Penin- moved to Canada and probably merged with the Mississaugas, sula south of the Indian River was controlled by the who had broken away from the Anishinaabeg and migrated Algonquian Nanticoke.
    [Show full text]
  • Download Download
    The Southern Algonquians and Their Neighbours DAVID H. PENTLAND University of Manitoba INTRODUCTION At least fifty named Indian groups are known to have lived in the area south of the Mason-Dixon line and north of the Creek and the other Muskogean tribes. The exact number and the specific names vary from one source to another, but all agree that there were many different tribes in Maryland, Virginia and the Carolinas during the colonial period. Most also agree that these fifty or more tribes all spoke languages that can be assigned to just three language families: Algonquian, Iroquoian, and Siouan. In the case of a few favoured groups there is little room for debate. It is certain that the Powhatan spoke an Algonquian language, that the Tuscarora and Cherokee are Iroquoians, and that the Catawba speak a Siouan language. In other cases the linguistic material cannot be positively linked to one particular political group. There are several vocabularies of an Algonquian language that are labelled Nanticoke, but Ives Goddard (1978:73) has pointed out that Murray collected his "Nanticoke" vocabulary at the Choptank village on the Eastern Shore, and Heckeweld- er's vocabularies were collected from refugees living in Ontario. Should the language be called Nanticoke, Choptank, or something else? And if it is Nanticoke, did the Choptank speak the same language, a different dialect, a different Algonquian language, or some completely unrelated language? The basic problem, of course, is the lack of reliable linguistic data from most of this region. But there are additional complications. It is known that some Indians were bilingual or multilingual (cf.
    [Show full text]
  • The Power of the Appalachian Trail: Reimagining the Nature
    THE POWER OF THE APPALACHIAN TRAIL: REIMAGINING THE NATURE NARRATIVE THROUGH AUTOHISTORIA-TEORÍA A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY IN THE GRADUATE SCHOOL OF THE TEXAS WOMAN’S UNIVERSITY DEPARTMENT OF MULTICULTURAL WOMEN’S AND GENDER STUDIES COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES BY PAMELA WHITE WOLSEY, B.A., M.A. DENTON, TEXAS MAY 2020 Copyright © 2020 by Pamela White Wolsey DEDICATION For Earle ii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS To Mom, Dad, Tina, Maxine, and Reba, your unconditional love and continued support does not go unnoticed, and I am so fortunate to have each of you in my life. To Medeski, Edie, and VL, as well as the rhodies, mountain chickens, and wood thrush, thank you for sharing your spirit and teaching me the joys of interspecies relationships. I cannot express enough gratitude to my committee and committee chair, AnaLouise Keating, for her guidance and inspiration. You made a profound impact on my personal and professional growth. My heartfelt appreciation is for my husband and hiking companion, Josh. Thank you for the tears, beers, and encouragement both on and off the trail. The AT and the dissertation were both incredible journeys, and I look forward to our next adventure together. iii ABSTRACT PAMELA WHITE WOLSEY THE POWER OF THE APPALACHIAN TRAIL: REIMAGINING THE NATURE NARRATIVE THROUGH AUTOHISTORIA-TEORÍA MAY 2020 This study situates the Appalachian Trail (AT) as a powerful place connecting multiple communities with varying identities, abilities, and personalities, a place where we can consider our radical interconnectedness in a way that moves beyond wilderness ideology and settler colonialism through the construction of an inclusive narrative about experiences in nature.
    [Show full text]
  • A Native History of Kentucky
    A Native History Of Kentucky by A. Gwynn Henderson and David Pollack Selections from Chapter 17: Kentucky in Native America: A State-by-State Historical Encyclopedia edited by Daniel S. Murphree Volume 1, pages 393-440 Greenwood Press, Santa Barbara, CA. 2012 1 HISTORICAL OVERVIEW As currently understood, American Indian history in Kentucky is over eleven thousand years long. Events that took place before recorded history are lost to time. With the advent of recorded history, some events played out on an international stage, as in the mid-1700s during the war between the French and English for control of the Ohio Valley region. Others took place on a national stage, as during the Removal years of the early 1800s, or during the events surrounding the looting and grave desecration at Slack Farm in Union County in the late 1980s. Over these millennia, a variety of American Indian groups have contributed their stories to Kentucky’s historical narrative. Some names are familiar ones; others are not. Some groups have deep historical roots in the state; others are relative newcomers. All have contributed and are contributing to Kentucky's American Indian history. The bulk of Kentucky’s American Indian history is written within the Commonwealth’s rich archaeological record: thousands of camps, villages, and town sites; caves and rockshelters; and earthen and stone mounds and geometric earthworks. After the mid-eighteenth century arrival of Europeans in the state, part of Kentucky’s American Indian history can be found in the newcomers’ journals, diaries, letters, and maps, although the native voices are more difficult to hear.
    [Show full text]
  • Looking Forward by Looking Back
    THE OFFICIAL MAGAZINE OF THE APPALACHIAN TRAIL CONSERVANCY / WINTER 2021 LOOKING FORWARD BY LOOKING BACK CONTENTS / WINTER 2021 12 / ACKNOWLEDGEMENT Who we are, how we got here, and how we find the path forward 16 / NATIVE LANDS CONTENTS / WINTER 2021 Indigenous American lands along the A.T. 24 / THE A.T. AND RACE 06 / CONTRIBUTORS Reckoning with the past opens the door to an equitable future 08 / PRESIDENT’S LETTER 10 / LETTERS 26 / PREPARING FOR 52 / VOICES OF DEDICATION THE TRAIL 46 / TRAIL STORIES Unfiltered determination sets the tone for a beautiful adventure A close call with Mother Nature 30 / HEADING TOWARD 48 / INDIGENOUS TRUE NORTH The American chestnut tree Finding an authentic path to justice 54 / PARTING THOUGHT Home and the rhythm of nature 34 / WE WERE THERE, TOO Pioneering A.T. Women ON THE COVER Appalachian Trail near Mount Rogers, 38 / CHANGING OUTDOOR Virginia — which intersects with the Native American territory lands of the Moneton Nation. REPRESENTATION The A.T. runs through 22 Native Nations’ traditional & NARRATIVES territories and holds an abundant amount of Building a relationship with the outdoors Indigenous history. Photo by Jeffrey Stoner Above: Rocky Fork Creek along the A.T. corridor in 42 / TRAIL AS MUSE Lamar Alexander Rocky Fork State Park, Tennessee/ Appalachian Trail impressions North Carolina intersects with the Native American territory lands of the S’atsoyaha Nation. Photo by Jerry Greer THE MAGAZINE OF THE APPALACHIAN TRAIL CONSERVANCY / WINTER 2021 ATC EXECUTIVE LEADERSHIP MISSION Sandra Marra / President & CEO The Appalachian Trail Conservancy’s mission is to protect, manage, and Nicole Prorock / Chief Financial Officer advocate for the Appalachian Shalin Desai / Vice President of Advancement National Scenic Trail.
    [Show full text]
  • Table of Contents
    American Indian Tribes Table of Contents Contents-Volume 1 Introduction, 3 Culture Areas of North America Arctic, 11 California, 19 Great Basin, 26 Northeast, 30 NorthwestCoast, 36 Plains, 43 Plateau, 50 Southeast, 57 Southwest, 67 Subarctic, 74 Tribes and Traditions Abenaki, 81 Achumawi, 84 Adena, 85 Ahtna, 88 Ais, 89 Alabama, 90 Aleut, 91 Algonquin, 94 Alsea, 96 Anadarko, 97 Anasazi, 97 Apache, 101 Apache Tribe of Oklahoma, 108 Apalachee, 111 Apalachicola, 112 Arapaho, 112 Archaic, 118 Arikara, 119 Assiniboine, 121 Atakapa, 123 Atsina, 124 Atsugewi, 125 Aztec, 126 Bannock, 131 Bayogoula, 132 Basketmaker, 132 Beaver, 135 Bella Bella, 136 Bella Coola, 137 Beothuk, 138 Biloxi, 139 Blackfoot and Blackfeet Confederacy, 140 Caddo tribal group, 146 Cahuilla, 153 Calusa, 155 CapeFear, 156 Carib, 156 Carrier, 158 Catawba, 159 Cayuga, 160 Cayuse, 161 Chasta Costa, 163 Chehalis, 164 Chemakum, 165 Cheraw, 165 Cherokee, 166 Cheyenne, 175 Chiaha, 180 Chichimec, 181 Chickasaw, 182 Chilcotin, 185 Chinook, 186 Chipewyan, 187 Chitimacha, 188 Choctaw, 190 Chumash, 193 Clallam, 194 Clatskanie, 195 Clovis, 195 CoastYuki, 196 Cocopa, 197 Coeurd'Alene, 198 Columbia, 200 Colville, 201 Comanche, 201 Comox, 206 Coos, 206 Copalis, 208 Costanoan, 208 Coushatta, 209 Cowichan, 210 Cowlitz, 211 Cree, 212 Creek, 216 Crow, 222 Cupeño, 230 Desert culture, 230 Diegueño, 231 Dogrib, 233 Dorset, 234 Duwamish, 235 Erie, 236 Esselen, 236 Fernandeño, 238 Flathead, 239 Folsom, 242 Fox, 243 Fremont, 251 Gabrielino, 252 Gitksan, 253 Gosiute, 254 Guale, 255 Haisla, 256 Han, 256
    [Show full text]
  • A Study of the Influence of the Mormon Church on the Catawba Indians of South Carolina 1882-1975
    Brigham Young University BYU ScholarsArchive Theses and Dissertations 1976 A Study of the Influence of the Mormon Church on the Catawba Indians of South Carolina 1882-1975 Jerry D. Lee Brigham Young University - Provo Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd Part of the Indigenous Studies Commons, and the Mormon Studies Commons BYU ScholarsArchive Citation Lee, Jerry D., "A Study of the Influence of the Mormon Church on the Catawba Indians of South Carolina 1882-1975" (1976). Theses and Dissertations. 4871. https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/4871 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by BYU ScholarsArchive. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of BYU ScholarsArchive. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. 44 A STUDY OF THE theinfluenceINFLUENCE OF THE MORMON CHURCH ON THE CATAWBA INDIANS OF SOUTH CAROLINA 1882 1975 A thesis presented to the department of history brigham young university in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree master of arts by jerryterry D lee december 1976 this thesis by terry D lee is accepted in its present form by the department of history of brigham young university as satisfying the thesis requirement for the degree of master of arts ted T wardwand comcitteemittee chairman r eugeeugenfeeugence E campbell ommiaeommiadcommitcommiliteeCommilC tciteelteee member 0 4 ralphvwitebcwiB smith committee member A 2.2 76 L dandag ted J weamerwegmerwagmer
    [Show full text]
  • Saponi History Book
    Scott Preston Collins Chapter 1: The Ghost-men of the Woodlands Anciently the Siouan speaking groups originated in the Ohio River Valley. They began moving to the Piedmont of Virginia around 800 A.D, possibly following migrating buffalo herds in the directions they went. (1) Siouan groups migrated north and west into the Illinois, Indiana, Michigan and Wisconsin areas, some moved west to the Great Plains, some stayed in the Ohio River Valley, between the Licking River and the Ohio River, and along Scioto River and further west along the Kanawha River. Some settled into the Piedmont regions of the Quirank and Appalachian Mountains. (2) The Menominee are an Algonquin tribe that resided on the north shore of Lake Michigan at European contact. In the Menominee oral tradition there is a Winnebago arrival narrative. The Winnebago, or Ho Chunk (Hotcâgara, people of the parent speech), are a Siouan speaking tribe and are sometimes credited with the effigy mounds in the Wisconsin area as well originating in the pre-Columbian Ohio River Valley. The Winnebago came to the Menominee in the form of ravens or blackbirds across Lake Michigan to Red Banks on Green Bay. This story at least indicates a westward moving Siouan speaking population preserved in oral tradition. (3) James Mooney concluded that the Siouan speaking tribes originated in the Ohio Valley based on his study of the dispersal of the language along with informants among the Plains Dakotans. The Siouan speakers on the Great Plains maintained oral traditions which stated that they came from the east and near to the Great Lakes.
    [Show full text]
  • Finding the Singing Spruce: Craft Labor, Global Forests, and Musical Instrument Makers in Appalachia
    University of Kentucky UKnowledge Theses and Dissertations--Anthropology Anthropology 2019 FINDING THE SINGING SPRUCE: CRAFT LABOR, GLOBAL FORESTS, AND MUSICAL INSTRUMENT MAKERS IN APPALACHIA Jasper Waugh-Quasebarth University of Kentucky, [email protected] Digital Object Identifier: https://doi.org/10.13023/etd.2019.037 Right click to open a feedback form in a new tab to let us know how this document benefits ou.y Recommended Citation Waugh-Quasebarth, Jasper, "FINDING THE SINGING SPRUCE: CRAFT LABOR, GLOBAL FORESTS, AND MUSICAL INSTRUMENT MAKERS IN APPALACHIA" (2019). Theses and Dissertations--Anthropology. 38. https://uknowledge.uky.edu/anthro_etds/38 This Doctoral Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Anthropology at UKnowledge. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations--Anthropology by an authorized administrator of UKnowledge. For more information, please contact [email protected]. STUDENT AGREEMENT: I represent that my thesis or dissertation and abstract are my original work. Proper attribution has been given to all outside sources. I understand that I am solely responsible for obtaining any needed copyright permissions. I have obtained needed written permission statement(s) from the owner(s) of each third-party copyrighted matter to be included in my work, allowing electronic distribution (if such use is not permitted by the fair use doctrine) which will be submitted to UKnowledge as Additional File. I hereby grant to The University of Kentucky and its agents the irrevocable, non-exclusive, and royalty-free license to archive and make accessible my work in whole or in part in all forms of media, now or hereafter known.
    [Show full text]
  • Revaluation of the Eastern Siouan Problem the Tutelo
    SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION Bureau of American Ethnology BuUetin 164 Anthropological Papers, No. 52 REVALUATION OF THE EASTERN SIOUAN PROBLEM WITH PARTICULAR EMPHASIS ON THE VIRGINIA BRANCHES—THE OCCANEECHI, THE SAPONI, AND THE TUTELO By CARL F. MILLER 116 870929—57 10 AMERICAN ETHNOLOGY [BOLL. 164 116 BUREAU OF CONTENTS PAGE Preface 119 Historical documentation 121 Evaluation and interpretation of the facts regarding the Siouan question. 173 Summary and conclusion 205 Literature cited 207 ILLUSTKATIONS MAPS 8. Facsimile of John Lederer's map, 1672 116 9. Facsimile of John Lawson's map, 1709 125 10. Facsimile of William Byrd's map of the Dividing Line (Boyd, 1922).. 129 11. Facsimile of F. L. Hawks' map, 1663-1729 132 12. Facsimile of Ogilby's map, 1671 134 13. Facsimile of map of the Rev. Peter Fontaine, Jr. (1787), who accom- panied the Commissioners as a chaplain 135 14. Modern map projecting the routes taken by Lederer and by Batts and Fallam 178 117 PREFACE After spending three seasons in the field in the Buggs Island-John H. Kerr Reservoir in southern Virginia and obtaining considerable ceramic and other artifactual remains from a number of sites in the area, I started to examine this material preparatory to writing a report of my results when a question arose regarding the origin of the pottery and the ethnic group to which it was attributed. The solu- tion of this question was not in the field of archeology, directly, but rather in the field of ethnology and linguistics. The recovered pottery assemblage was not recognized as that usually attributed to Siouan-speaking peoples, and since they were listed as the probable occupants of this section of Virginia it neces- sitated a perusal of the hterature dealing with this group—especially the Occaneechi, Saponi, and Tutelo—from the earliest incursions by whites up to the present day in order to see whether the solution could be found.
    [Show full text]
  • The Monyton Diaspora: a History of the Middle Ohio River Valley, 1640-1700
    The Monyton Diaspora: A History of the Middle Ohio River Valley, 1640-1700 Isaac J. Emrick Thesis submitted to the Eberly College Arts and Sciences at West Virginia University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Masters of Arts in History Mary Lou Lustig, Ph.D., Chair Ronald Lewis, Ph.D. Gregory Good, Ph.D. Department of History Morgantown, West Virginia © 2005 Keywords: Native Americans, Indian History, West Virginia History, Colonial North America, Diaspora ii ABSTRACT The Monyton Diaspora: A History of the Middle Ohio River Valley, 1640-1700 Isaac J. Emrick During the seventeenth century a vibrant group of Native Americans, the Monytons, controlled southern West Virginia and northeastern Kentucky. The effects of contact with Europeans destabilized their societies as far inland as the Ohio Valley. This began the process which eventually pushed most Monytons from the region. The Five Nations Iroquois, pressured by social changes farther north, attacked the Monytons further drawing people out of the Ohio Valley. A growing southern Indian slave trade also contributed to the decay of Monyton dominance in the region. A central point in this thesis is that Monytons formed and reformed traditions to deal with social changes. They can be traced throughout their “diaspora” as they became incorporated into larger Indian groups. The Monyton Diaspora led to the creation of the Shawnee during the late seventeenth century. This thesis provides a redefinition of the history of southern West Virginia’s Native American past. iii Dedication I dedicate this thesis to mo beag peitseog. For almost as long as my wife and I have been together, this project has cluttered my mind (not to mention our house) with piles of research.
    [Show full text]