SPECIES EXTINCT OR EXTIRPATED. 461 



1882-83. — Texas, a flight seen in winter of 1882-83 near Lampasas that 

 was three and one-half hours in passing. Many killed. No recent 

 record (A. S. Eldredge). 



1885. — New Hampshire, Concord (G. M. Allen, Birds of New Hampshire). 



1885. — South Carolina, immature female, November 21 (Arthur T. Wayne, 

 Auk, 190G, p. 61). 



1886. — Rhode Island, specimen taken by Walter A. Angell in 1886 or 1887. 

 T. M. Flanagan took about a dozen at Warwick in 1885 or 1886 (John 

 H. Flanagan). 



1889. — District of Columbia, October 19 (W. W. Cooke, Proc, Biological 



Society of Washington, 1908, p. 116); specimens not taken. 

 1889. — Connecticut, Portland, young male, October 1 (John H. Sage) ; 



specimen preserved. 

 1889. — Province of Quebec, Tadousac, specimen taken July 20, 1889; now in 



collection of Dr. Jonathan Dwight, Jr., New York (J. H. Fleming, Ottawa 



Naturalist, Vol. XXII, 1907, p. 236). 

 1893. — Indiana, pair and nest taken by C. B. Brown of Chicago in spring 



of 1893 at English Lake; nest and eggs preserved in his collection 



(Ruthven Deane, Auk, 1895, p. 299). 

 1893. — Arkansas, Siloam Springs, last shipment live Pigeons to W. W. 



Judy & Co., St. Louis (Ruthven Deane, Auk, 1895, p. 298). 



1893. — Manitoba, Winnipeg, adult male taken; specimen mounted by Geo. 



E. Atkinson, Lake Winnepegosis, April li (J. H. Fleming, Auk, 1903, 

 p. 66). 



1894. — North Carolina, Buncombe County, female taken by J. S. Cairns, 

 October 20 (C. S. Brimley). 



1894.. — Massachusetts, an adult female killed by Neil Casey at Melrose, 

 Mass., April 12, 1894; specimen preserved and mounted; now first recorded. 



1895. — Louisiana, Mandeville, near New Orleans, January 26, 1895, two 

 taken out of a flock of five by Dr. J. H. Lamb; one an immature male 

 (Prof. Geo. E. Beyer). 



1895. — Illinois, Lake Forest, August 7, young female in collection of John 



F. Ferry (Ruthven Deane, Auk, 1896, p. 81). 



1895. — Nebraska, Sarpy County, one killed out of fifteen or twenty, No- 

 vember 9, by Hon. Edgar Howard of Papillon, five miles southeast of 

 that place (Lawrence Bruner, Nebraska Birds, p. 84). 



1895. — Pennsylvania, Canadensis, Munroe County, specimen shot, Octo- 

 ber 23, by Mr. Geo. Stewart of Philadelphia, and now in his possession 

 (Witmer Stone). 



1896. — New Jersey, Englewood, June 23, immature female taken by 

 C. Irving Wood and mounted by J. Ullrich (F. M. Chapman, Auk, 



1896, p. 341). 

 1896. — Wisconsin, Delavan Lake, N. Hollister killed an immature male 

 September 8, 1896 (Auk, 1896, p. 341); last Wisconsin record backed 

 by a specimen. 



