ABORIGINAL OCCUPATION OF NEW YORK 127 
There is an early village reported by Mr Coates, which is one 
and a half miles west of the one at Clifton Springs. The relics are 
similar, excepting that no bone articles have been found. It was a 
small village, but the few fireplaces are large and deep. The site is 
a mile south of the Canandaigua outlet, a quarter of a mile west 
of Fall brook. 
6 On his map of the Seneca country Gen. J. S. Clark placed an 
Indian village almost in the center of the town of East Bloomfield. 
Mr Hildburgh reported a cemetery there. A village site and ceme- 
tery are on Mud creek, east northeast of East Bloomfield village, 
with European articles. A similar site a mile west of this, is near 
the bank of a small creek. 
7 Gen. Clark placed another village near the north line of the 
town of Canandaigua. 
8 He also locates another just south of the village of West Bloom- 
field. This was east of Honeoye creek and had two cemeteries. 
early and recent. Both long and discoid shell beads were found. 
This may be the one reported a little west of West Bloomfield, 
which should be placed farther north on the map. It is on the road 
from West Bloomfield to Lima, and the cemetery is on the east 
bank of Honeoye creek. The village was on a steep hillside. 
g9 N. W. Randall reported a village eight miles south of 
Victor and as much westerly from Canandaigua, a little east of Mud 
creek. It seems the site placed by Gen. J. S. Clark near the town 
line. The village was recent but there was a prehistoric cemetery 
half a mile away. Clark located the Gandougarae of 1657 near the 
northeast corner of East Bloomfield. This seems the village men- 
tioned by Turner with European relics. There are several ceme- 
teries with early relics in the vicinity. 
10 A small cemetery was three miles south of Canandaigua, 
west of the lake. 
11 Honeoye, at the foot of Honeoye lake half a mile east of the 
outlet and south of Mill creek, was burned in 1779.—Sullivan, p. 
130. There were recent articles on Phelps’s flat near the old Indian 
castle at the foot of the lake-—Turner. P.& G. p. 199, 203. Clark 
placed the village on his map west of the outlet. The name of 
Honeoye may have come from Onaghee. 
