Physical Features and Habitats 19 



there are forty-five which may yet be discovered." 



Professional taxidermists in the past have found 

 here a good field for collecting. C. D. Wood 24 of 

 Philadelphia, secured at Coatesville, Townsend's 

 Warbler, the sole Eastern record. Harry Garrett 25 

 collected about his home in Willistown township 

 for many years and his collection was purchased 

 by the Swarthmore College ; later he moved to West 

 Chester and probably helped Josiah Hoopes 26 form 

 his splendid collection of North American land birds, 

 now in the Academy of Natural Sciences of Phila- 

 delphia. 



Thomas H(oopes) Jackson of West Chester, 

 penned the first authentic description of the nidifica- 

 tion of the Worm-eating Warbler in 1869, and he 

 has long been the leading authority on our breeding 

 Raptores and Wood Warblers. Among the oological 

 collectors of this period or earlier were E. J. Dar- 

 lington, 27 Dr. W(illiam) L(ivingston) Hartman 

 and J. Hoopes Matlack, 28 all of West Chester; also 

 B. A. Hoopes, 29 of Philadelphia and Downingtown, 

 an ornithologist better known as the original de- 

 scriber of Krider's Hawk, named in honor of the 

 Philadelphia taxidermist 30 so well known in Chester 

 county. 



Samuel N(icholson) Rhoads wrote from the 

 Westtown School and C(harles) F(rederic) P (hil- 

 lips) in 1876, published notes on 21 species found 

 near Kennett Square; mostly breeding records of 

 more or less importance at that date. Dr. B(enja- 

 min) Harry Warren of West Chester, published a 

 complete list of 218 species in 1879-1880. Weeding 



