History of the Indian Tribes of Hudson's River — Passage 217
[Edward Manning Ruttenber (1872)] Atkarkarton, the Indian name for Kingston, was not the name of an Indian village, but for a tract called by the Dutch the Great Plot, or meadow on which the Indians raised corn and beans. At is equivalent to at or by the waters. Nutten Hook, at Katskil, was called by the Indians Kock-hachcbtngh; a place known to the Dutch as the Flying corner, was called by the Indians, Machawanick; a small stream which enters " the creek called the Kats kil" on the south, was called ^uatawicbnaak; Silvester Salisbury, in 1678, 1 History of the Indian Tribes of the United States, part Hi, 73. Ante, p. 157. APPENDIX. 395 obtained " five great flats or plains" called Wachacbkeek, Wich-quanachtekok, Pachquyak, Assiskowacbkok, and Pot'ick; a tract sold to Jacob Lockerman was bounded on the south by a creek called Canasenix, " east on the river in the Great Imbocht where Loveridge leaves off, called by the Indians Peoquanackqua, and west by a place called by the Indians £htackanock; " and Henry Beekman had a tract " under the great mountains called Blue hills, by a place called Kiskatameck" The Mabican village