g2 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 
is probably to a site two miles northeast examined by the writer 
in 1892. It is northeast of Mr Ellenwood’s house and has abund- 
ant modern relics but no brown pottery. Skeletons are rarely 
found but it seems a long peopled and rather recent village. A 
little south is the Hog’s Back where some have located a stockade, 
perhaps doubtfully. Half a mile farther south are old corn hills 
in Mrs Cummings’s woods. 
21 There were Indian cornfields near Madison lake in Madison, 
and an Indian opening in the same town.—Hammond, p. 602 
22 Woodman’s lake and Leland’s ponds belonged to the Oneida 
fisheries when their villages were near. These are in the pine woods 
in Eaton.—Hammond, p. 281 
23 Many relics have been found at Earlville and Poolville— 
Hammond, p. 43% 
24 The Windfall party built a church in Lenox, three miles south 
of Oneida Castle on the road to Knoxville—Hammond, p. 114. 
St Peter’s church also stood on a hill in Vernon, southeast of the 
butternut orchard near Oneida Castle. A cemetery was opened 
west of the West Shore railroad depot, where the head of each 
skeleton rested on a modern brick. 
25 In 1794 the Christian party were at the foot of Stockbridge 
hill near the Five Chimneys tavern. A few Oneidas remain. 
26 At one time 40 families lived near Hatch’s lake and swamp 
in the southwest corner of Eaton—Hammond, p. 293 
27 Two miles below Hamilton was a recent camping ground.— 
Hammond, p. 414 
28 As late as 1810 some Oneidas lived at Canastota. Some 
mounds were reported at Owen’s point, Chittenango creek. 
Monroe county. Mr George H. Harris has given an excellent 
account of the sites and trails of Monroe county in the first 15 
chapters of the Semu-centenmal history of Rochester, 1884. Before 
his death these were issued separately, and entitled the Aboriginal 
occupation of the lower Genesee country. He spared no pains to 
make this full and accurate. Mr Squier also did some good work 
there. 
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