ANNOTATED LIST OF THE BIRDS 259 



ENGLEWOOD REGION. First recorded March 24, 1916 by 

 Miss Ina C. Dewitt; December 21, 1916 (Weber) to April 

 11, 1917; February 15 (Rogers) to March 5, 1920 (Bowdish). 



PINE GROSBEAK (Pinicola enucleator leucura) 

 The Pine Grosbeak is a very rare and irregular winter 

 visitant. There have been ten marked flights in the past 

 ninety-six years, the last in the winter of 1903-04. The last 

 eighteen years is the longest interval between flights of which 

 I have any record. During this period only a few small 

 flocks or single stragglers have been reported, chiefly from 

 extreme northwestern New Jersey and eastern Long Island. 

 Our territory seems just a little too far south, as Pine Gros- 

 beaks reach Dutchess County, New York and southern 

 Connecticut much more frequently than the vicinity of New 

 York City. 



Long Island. Very rare and irregular winter visitant, some- 

 times abundant, November 1 to March 14, 1904 at Miller Place 

 (A. H. Helme). Since that year stragglers have been recorded at 

 Sand's Point, November 23, 1918 (Laidlaw Williams) and Garden 

 City, December 1 and 3, 1921 (M. S. Crosby and J. T. Nichols). 



ORIENT. Rare and irregular winter visitant, November 1, 

 1903 to February 28, 1904. Stragglers have been recorded 

 during three winters since the last great flight. 

 MASTIC. No record. 



LONG BEACH. A single bird in the Rosa ruqom bushes at 

 Point Lookout in the early winter of 1919 was described un- 

 mistakably to Mr. Bicknell by C. H. Lott. 

 New York State. Recorded at Ossining 1869, 1874-75, 1884 

 (Fisher) and 1896 (L. S. Foster). 



CENTRAL PARK. Unknown since the winter of 1903-04, 

 w r hen it appeared on November 12 (Rogers). 



BRONX REGION. Abundant at Riverdale during the early 

 part of 1884, remaining until March 23 (Bicknell); no observ- 

 ers in the region during the last great flight; January 6, 1917 

 (L. N. Nichols). 



New Jersey. Very rare and irregular, but apparently occurring 

 more frequently in the extreme northwestern section. Otherwise 

 practically unrecorded since the winter of 1903-04. The only 



