ABORIGINAL OCCUPATION OF NEW YORK i 75 
Squier, p. 27, pl. 4, no. 2. This work appears in fig. 54. It is now 
a garden. 
16 Another work was on the edge of the pine plains a mile east 
of the road from Sanfords Corners to Black river. 
17 Several other obliterated sites were known in Le Ray. One 
was near Felts Mills.—S quier, D2 7eeldere was a cemetery a mile 
south. 
18 J. S. Twining reported a village site ona hill in Carthage. 
19 An open village was nearly a mile north of Burr’s Mills, with | 
stone hearths.—Squier, p. 23. This was on the Woodruff farm. 
Another of eight circular lodges was on the Gifford place two miles . 
northwest of Burr’s Mills. 
20 A village of 15 circular lodxes on O. Butterfield’s place a 
mile west of East Watertown and on the north side of Rutland 
hollow. Village sites in this vicinity were reported by Henry 
Woodworth. There was a village on land of Mrs Woodworth and 
Mr Stewart a mile southwest of East Watertown. Stone and clay 
pipes and beads. 
21 A cemetery and an irregular work are on the terrace two and 
one half miles southeast of Watertown.—Squier, p. 22, pl. 2, no. 2. 
His plan appears in fig. 43. Hough reported two works on lot 29 
half a mile farther and another quite near. The one on Asa Good- 
nough’s land had three gates. A few rods off was a smaller cir- 
cular work.—KRegents, 1851, p. 104, fig. 7. This is given in fig. 44. 
22 A curving bank across a ridge on lot 31 half a mile east of , 
Burr’s Mills was a quarter of a mile from the Rutland line-—Hough, 
p. 11. It was on the Lampson farm.—Regents, 1851, p. 104, fig. 6. 
The plan appears in fig. 50. 7 
23 A village of 15 circular lodges half a mile north of East Water- 
town. A similar village on the Howland place a mile east of the 
same village. Also clay pits and fireplaces on the Durham place 
one and one quarter miles east. Another village on the Fulton 
place one and one half miles east, and another on the Normander 
farm a mile east of East Watertown. ‘This had 30 lodges. 
24 A slight work on the Allen place south side of Rutland hol- 
low with many skeletons suggesting recent occupation. Squier, p. 
o 
