370 BIRDS OF THE NEW YORK CITY REGION 



and May 9, 1905 (Hix); May 5, 1907 (Hix); April 7 and 8, 

 1910 (Griscom); May 11, 1910 (Griscom); April 18, 1911 

 (Griscom); April 27, 1913 (Griscom); May 9, 1916 (Janvrin); 

 April 30, 1920 (Dr. Ellsworth Elliott); May 14, 1920 (L. N. 

 Nichols); May 24, 1920 (Griscom); May 3, 1922 (Griscom); 

 also September 10, 1905 (Hix); September, 1910 (Anne A. 

 Crolius); August 28, 1922 (Griscom). 



BRONX REGION. Specimen taken at New Rochelle, Sep- 

 tember 12, 1895 (E. I. Haines); one seen May 3, 1912 (Messrs. 

 Burdsall, Comly, Cook and Maples); one seen May 7, 1920 

 (L. N. Nichols and E. G. Nichols). 

 New Jersey. Apparently of purely casual occurrence in our 



area; on May 16, 1920 one was seen by the Passaic River near 



Plainfield (W. DeW. Miller and C. H. Rogers). 



TOWNSEND'S SOLITAIRE (Myadestes townsendi) 

 An accidental visitor from the far West. One was taken 

 at Kings Park, Long Island, on November 25, 1905 (J. A. 

 Weber). 



WOOD THRUSH (Hylocichla mustelina) 

 A common and well-known summer resident throughout, 

 except near the sea. It arrives the last days of April or the 

 first days of May, and lingers into October. Breeding birds 

 disappear from their nesting haunts the end of August. After 

 this Wood Thrushes are very hard to find, and but few are 

 recorded. 



Long Island. Common summer resident, April 13 and May 1 

 to October 29. 



ORIENT. Summer resident, locally rare; May 1, 1908 to 

 September 24, 1914; average arrival May 4. 

 MASTIC. Fairly common summer resident. 

 LONG BEACH. Casual on migration, three records, May 4, 

 1916 to May 17, 1917 (Bicknell). 

 New York State. Common summer resident throughout. 



CENTRAL PARK. Formerly a common transient, a pair or 

 two breeding annually; in the last few years a very uncommon 

 transient; April 28, 1908 (Anne A. Crolius) to May 25, 1907 

 (Griscom); September 28, 1914 (Hix) to October 5, 1921 

 (Carter and Griscom). 



