BIRDS OF ESSEX COUNTY. 



319 



the description and figures of Wilson and Audubon. Nuttall ^ reports the tak- 

 ing of a specimen near Salem about 1830, and even as late as 1875 it was 

 reported by Brewer^ as having been taken at Wenham. 



SUMMARY. 



Of the 321 species and subspecies, including the 2 introduced species, I 

 have myself seen 2 1 5 alive in Essex County, and have examined specimens from 

 the County of all of these but 2. These 2 are Henslow's Sparrow and Palm 

 Warbler, both of which have been identified by other members of the Club 

 besides myself. There remain 106 species ; of these I have examined speci- 

 mens of 98 from the County. Of the remaining 8 species, 7 are authorita- 

 tively recorded in literature and the specimens of some if not all of these are 

 in existence. These are as follows : Sooty Tern, Roseate Tern, Yellow- 

 crowned Night Heron, Gray Kingbird, Bohemian Waxwing, Hudsonian Chicka- 

 dee, and Blue-gray Gnatcatcher. The records of the i remaining species, 

 namely, Cardinal, have been supplied from reliable sources. 



The following is a summary of the birds considered in the foregoing 

 pages : — 



' Thomas Nuttall: A Manual of the Ornithology of the United States and of Canada, vol. i, 



p. 297, 1832. 



2 T. M. Brewer; Proc. Boston Soc. Nat. Hist., vol. 17, p. 440, 1875. 



