94 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 
It was nearly half circular with a natural bank on the fourth 
side. There was a covered way to the water.—Vates, p. 15-16. 
Squier also quotes this and adds that the usual relics were found. 
Half a mile north of this on higher land Mr Kirkland found a 
smaller and stronger work. Both had Allen’s creek on one side. 
Mr Squier said that nothing indicated these spots “except the 
greater abundance of stones on the line of the former embank- 
ments.”—Squier, p. 59-60 . 
6 Frank Kingsbury three miles east of Mumford plowed up 
bones in 1898 and then dug up five well preserved skeletons. 
7 At the upper Charlotte ferry and near by have been found 
arrowheads and stone pestles, bullets, ete—Harris, p. 43 
8 A break in the cliff on the east bank of the Genesee, half a 
mile below the lower fall, makes a natural landing place which was 
a great camping ground. There were two mounds not over 100 
feet from the edge of the bluff, which have been levelled, but skele- 
tons and relics have been found. This is Brewer’s landing, half 
a mile north of Hanford’s which is on the other shore.—Harris, 
p. 23-26 | 
Q Squier vainly searched for a work between the river and Iron- 
dequoit bay, five miles north of Rochester.—Squer, p. 58. Harris 
found this. “An ancient fortification stood near the ford of a brook 
which rises in the little vale southeast of Rattlesnake point. It 
was the ruins of this fort for which Mr Squier searched in vain in 
1848.” —Harris, p. 42 
10 Traces of a town and cemetery were found on Daniel Leake’s 
farm on the east side below Brewer’s landing.— Squier, p. 42 
11 Most of those in Rochester are grouped under this number. 
There was an old fort in front of Mr Hooker’s house near Hooker’s 
cemetery and North avenue. A large settlement was on the sand 
knolls half a mile west of the Culver farm and near North avenue. 
Another large town was on the top of the hill over which Lake ave- 
nue passes, and all the slope thence to the river and north to Han- 
ford’s landing was used for camps. Work shops for flint were 
numerous toward the river end of Frauenberger avenue. There 
were camps at the Indian spring, at the corner of Spring street 
and Spring alley, and all the way thence to Hanford’s. Near Elm- 
