126 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM ; 
another village a little farther north. West of Geneva is the Kana- 
desaga of 1779, with two villages northwest of this. Ganechstage 
of 1720 is south of Kanadesaga, and to the southwest of this is 
the Ganechstage of 1760. Gothseunquean of 1779 is on the west 
bank of Seneca lake. 
1 Irregular work on Boughton hill a mile south of the village 
of Victor, which was destroyed in 1687 by De Nonville. The small 
fort of that year was on Fort hill over a mile west. Squier’s plan 
is given in fig. 78, showing a work nearly 1500 feet long with 
an area of 20 acres. This was Canagora, the St Jacques of the 
missionaries. Greenhalgh visited it in 1677 and said it was much 
like Onondaga. The village site is on R. B. Moore’s farm, and 
there is a cemetery less than a mile south of this on the farm of 
George Ketchum, which has European articles. Turner also men- 
tions articles at Victor Flats. 
2 Fort hill a mile west of Boughton accurately corresponds with 
De Nonville’s account of the “picket fort at the top of a little 
mountain scarped on all sides.” 
3 Canaenda was also called Gandougarae or St Michael and 
was a village of adopted Hurons. Hon. George S. Conover said 
that it is usually located in East Bloomfield, three and one half 
miles from Boughton hill near Mud creek, but thought it needed 
farther investigation. He thought the village was moved into the 
town of Seneca after 1687 and placed on Burrell creek about two 
miles southeast of White springs. W. L. Hildburgh had European 
relics from the former place. Greenhalgh placed Canaenda four 
miles south of Boughton hill. 
4 There was a burial place on lot 98, Manchester. 
5 Rev. J. W. Sanborn explored a recent burial mound at Clifton 
Springs in 1880. 
Irving W. Coates reports an early village site just south of Clif- 
ton Springs, nearly a mile south of the Canandaigua outlet. It 
occupied a little over two acres, with fireplaces very numerous and 
close together. It seems to have been long inhabited and was of 
early date. There are fragments of decorated pottery, fine celts 
and arrowheads. Articles of bone have been found, but none of 
shell. 
