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L’Quoit, as his name appeared on the rolls of the Spokane Tribe, in 1899. Born a Yakama, he enrolled in the Spokane Tribe ca. 1899. Courtesy of the Spokane Tribe of Indians Cultural Preservation Office. Winthrop’s overland guide Loolowcan, known more commonly as Lokout or LaQuoit, as photographed in 1910 by Edward S. Curtis and there named Luquaiot. Courtesy of Smithsonian Institution Libraries, Washington dc. [18.224.149.242] Project MUSE (2024-04-24 04:21 GMT) Lo-kout or Loolowcan with an Indian police officer ca. 1912. Note the gouge in his forehead gotten from a rifle butt on a battlefield ca. 1856. Courtesy of Washington State University Libraries. The Duke of York, as Winthrop knew him, actually Chits-a-mah-han or Chetze -moka (ca. 1808–1883), later chief of the S’Klallam Tribe. Courtesy of the Jefferson County Historical Society, Port Townsend, Washington. Theodore Winthrop, 1861. Courtesy of the author’s family. ...

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