644 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 



feet long by 450 feet wide. It is 2 miles south of Manlius village 

 occupying the full width of the hill. The large cemetery is farther 

 north and on the edge of the east ravine. Recent relics. There are 

 many memorials of the French missions and a boulder remains on 

 which the Onondagas sharpened their implements. This site is on 

 the Fieldman farm. 



60 Clinton said that there was a cemetery of 3 or 4 acres a mile 

 eastward. This was on the Scoville farm, lot n, near Oran village. 



61 Indian fort is in Pompey, on lot 23, not lot 33 as usually stated. 

 A bank and ditch crossed it, running in a southeast line, according to 

 Clark, but really southwest. This was 300 feet long and there were 

 lodges on both sides. It has always been^called a recent site but the 

 writer found no evidence of this fact and defers to others. The 

 large grooved boulder has been removed. The site is locally known 

 as Temperance House fort and is on the property of Simon Murphy 

 and Willis Clark. 



62 A stockade was on the Indian knolls, on the Lawrence farm, 

 lot 68, a mile south of Pompey Center, east of the creek. Indian and 

 European articles are found, but no French. It was reported at an 

 early date as an oblong stockade of 2 acres. It is somewhat triangu- 

 lar and is about 675 feet long with a width of 360 at the broad end 

 to the south. No council wampum appears and but few shell beads. 

 It may be dated about 1640. This fort is on the property of Messrs 

 Doyle and Elbridge. 



63 Indian spring is east of this and of the road on a small stream. 

 On either side of this stream were the two grooved boulders now in 

 the state collection. Farther east on the hillside was a scattered 

 early site with graves. 



64 There was a cemetery near Hill's, lot 33. South of this, but 

 in Madison county, was the stockade already described, but which 

 was an Onondaga town. 



66 Circular stockade on the south line of Pompey, lot 98, extend- 

 ing into lot 8, Fabius, is on a hill. Nearly a quarter of the fort is 

 still in woodland. It had a diameter of about 225 feet. Soi 

 European articles are found. 



67 An early village located 2,y 2 miles southwest of Delphi. 



68 Cemetery about a mile northwest of the last, on lot 97, west 

 Carpenter's pond. Brass kettles were found here. 



70 Two mounds and two or more hamlets were near the Ononda^ 

 outlet in Geddes. One hamlet now lies east of the present outlet. 

 One is on the top of the hill west of this and on the south side of the 



