BIRDS CLAIMING TO BE ACCOUNTED BRITISH. 253 
authority” (Selby, B. B., L, p. 83,) to have been killed in 
Durham, is said to have been in Mr. Bullock’s collection, 
but there is no Eagle Owl entered as British-killed in his 
sale list, 
According to the Rev. F. O. Morris, an Eagle Owl was 
shot at Bedale in March, 1845; and another at Horton, 
near Bradford, in 1824; and a third occurred near Harrow- 
gate in 1832 (B. B,, I., p. 184). 
Another was taken, in 1848, in Lincolnshire, but accord- 
ing to Mr. Cordeaux was an escaped bird (Cordeaux’s 
“Birds of the Humber,” p. 12), which being the case, I do 
not quite see why my friend has included it in his work. 
Mtr. Harting (op. cit.) has not mentioned four asserted by 
Mr. Stewart (Mag. of N. H., V. p. 579) to have visited 
Donegal, and in truth it isso improbable as to be hardly 
worth serious consideration. 
In the Isle of Sanday, Baikie and Heddle say one was 
killed in 1830 (Nat. Hist. of Orkney, p. 31); and in Shet- 
land Mr. Saxby has two to notice, the first on the faith of 
a Mr. Nicholson, who saw it sitting on a stone in dignified 
solitude in the autumn of 1863; and the second at Balta 
in March, 1871, seen by himself, in which on that account, 
knowing what an accurate and conscientious naturalist he 
was, I should be ready to place confidence. 
To conclude, the latest occurrences which I have to 
notice, are one at Bridgnorth in 1873 (Zoologist, 3997) ; and 
one or two in the same year, I believe, on the Tummel in 
Perthshire (see “ Pall Mall Gazette” and “ Land and Water” 
of February 15th, 1873) which had come from the stock of 
Mr. Fountaine, the noted breeder of these birds, and had 
been purposely set at liberty on an estate in that county. 
RED-THROATED PIPIT. 
The Red-throated Pipit must be the subject of a note, 
