THE ARCHEOLOGICAL HISTORY OF NEW YORK 66 1 



32 Village site on Darwin McClure's farm, lot 20, Hopewell, 

 3 miles southeast of Canandaigua, one-half of a mile north of the 

 turnpike. A recent cemetery is not far away, and modern relics 

 have been found. The site is probably that of one of the Onaghee 

 villages. 



33 Burial site on the Albert Rose farm I mile north of Man- 

 chester. Several graves have been opened and relics believed by 

 Mr Follett to be of " mound-builder origin " have been found. Mr 

 Follett describes a native copper axe from this site and says it is 

 of an unusual type. 



34 A small village was west of Manchester Center, on the south 

 bank of Canandaigua outlet, nearly 2^2 miles northwest of the 

 village west of Clifton. Earthenware and articles of stone occur. 

 It was probably a fishing camp. 



35 A large fortified town was in the town of Phelps, on the 

 south side of the bluff facing Canandaigua outlet. A wall has been 

 described there. No recent articles have been found; all are of 

 stone or clay. The .site is northwest of the village of Phelps. 



36 Five miles northwest of Geneva, in Phelps, was a stockade on 

 Fort hill. This was not far from a hill on which was an earthwork. 

 It was a long parallelogram through which the road ran, on one 

 side of which the post holes remained. There were caches and 

 early relics (Squier, p. 87, 88, pi. 13, no. 2). 



37 Large village site just northeast of Naples, and lying between 

 Naples and Old creek. The occupation is Algonkian. No bone 

 articles are found. D. D. Luther has collected a large number of 

 implements from this and adjacent sites. 



38 Burial site in Naples village. Iroquoian. Pipes have been 

 found. 



39 Small village site with burials on the west side of Honeoye 

 lake on the California ranch. Four skeletons were exhumed here 

 during highway excavations. 



40 Earthwork 3^2 miles northwest of Geneva, east of the Castle 

 road. It was 800 feet long and an early site on high ground (Squier, 

 p. 55, pi. 7, no. i). There are graves in the southern part. 



41 Among the pine barrens on Mr Swift's farm 3 miles north of 

 Geneva is a small site, with early relics, reported by Dr W. G. 

 Hinsdale., 



42 In Geneva, on the old DeZeng place, west of Main street, were 

 many early relics and also camps near the south end of Main street 

 on the south side of Glass Factory bay. 



