150 NEW YORK STATE MUSEUM 
18 Lodge sites on two small coves on the south shore of Peconic 
bay. 
19 Large village site with graves at Sag Harbor. 
20 Fireplaces and a refuse heap at Hogonock a little northwest 
of Sag Harbor. Bone implements and pottery. 
21 Not far southwest of Sag Harbor was a large village site 
where all kinds of arrowheads were found. On a lodge site one 
and one half miles away all were triangular. On another two miles 
off all were stemmed. 
22 At Three Mile harbor the earth on the west side is white with 
shells which were used in making wampum. There are some on 
the east. 
23 The Sachem’s hole half way between Sag Harbor and East 
Hampton marked the spot where Poggatacut’s head rested in 1651 
when his body was set down on the way to the grave. The hole 
was 14 feet deep and wide and was kept clear by the Indians for 
nearly two hundred years. 
24 A recent cemetery in the southeast part of East Hampton 
village. 
25 Indian well southeast of Amagansett and near the shore. 
26 Fort of 1661. This was on Nominick hill near Napeague. 
27 ‘Two workshops south of Fort pond. 
28 Earthwork and ditch on the northeast side of Fort pond on 
Fort hill in Montauk. It was 100 feet square with a round tower 
of earth or stone at each corner.—Prime, p. 91-92. Mr Tooker 
reported this as 180 feet on each side and as very recently obliter- 
ated. There was a cemetery near and thence icame a stone foot- 
mark now in the collection of the Long Island historical society. 
Sullivan county. As in much of the Algonquin territory there- 
are no large sites here and few of the smaller have been reported. 
It is supposable that the name of Indian Field pond in Bethel refers 
to marks of occupation. French in his gazetteer says there were 
frequent traces of occupation, including trails, early and recent 
relics. 
1 There were Indians at Mamakating hollow in 1700.—French, 
p. 642 
