130 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 
followed the highway northwesterly. Canaenda was removed to 
lot 32 on Burrell creek where there was a large cemetery mostly on 
N. A. Read’s farm about 25 rods southwest of the creek. On that - 
farm and east of the creek was one of the principal sites of the town. 
On lot 31 west of the creek was another recent cemetery. Lodge 
sites and a cemetery were on the Hazlet farm, lot 37, west of 
Burrell creek. 
26 Kashong, on Kashong creek, seven miles south of Geneva, 
was burned in 1779, but the recent site is hardly well defined. A 
" recent cemetery was opened near the lake in 1889. 
27 Camps on Canandaigua outlet. 
28 Relics have been reported from Squaw island, at the foot of 
Canandaigua lake. Early implements occur on a site on a hill 
west of this. 
29 A small village was west of Manchester Center, on the south 
bank of Canandaigua outlet, nearly two and a half miles north- 
west of the village west of Clifton. Earthenware and articles of 
stone occur. It was probably a fishing camp. Mr Coates reported 
this and the following. 
30 A large fortified town was in the town of Phelps, on a bluff 
facing the Canandaigua outlet, on its south side. A wall has 
been described there. No recent articles have been found and all 
are of stone or clay. The site is northwest of the village of Phelps. 
31 Skeletons have been exhumed and relics found at Littleville, 
a hamlet on the creek south of Shortsville. Some of the latter indi- 
cate early visitors, and several trails converged at the ford there. 
32 Three fourths of a mile south of Chapinville near the 
creek was a workshop. Flint chips, unfinished weapons and fine 
stone articles were once frequent there. Some other reputed Indian 
sites which he had not personally examined, Mr Coates did not 
describe. 
Orange county. The notes on this county are mainly from 
Outline history of Orange county, by Samuel W. Eager. 
1 There was a hamlet abandoned in 1755 on Mr Mould’s farm 
on the main road from Montgomery to Albany. Other sites were 
traditional—Eager, p. 277 
