SPECIES EXTINCT OR EXTIRPATED. 461 



1882-83. — Texas, a flight seen in winter of 1882-83 near Lampasas that 

 was three and one-half hours in passing. Many killed. No recent 

 record (A. S. Eldredge). 



1885. — New Hampshire, Concord (G. M. Allen, Birds of New Hampshire). 



1885. — South Carolina, immature female, November 21 (Arthur T. Wayne, 

 Auk, 1906, p. 61). 



1886. — Rhode Island, specimen taken by Walter A. Angell in 1886 or 1887. 

 T. M. Flanagan took about a dozen at Warwick in 1885 or 1886 (John 

 H. Flanagan). 



1889. — District of Columbia, October 19 (W. W. Cooke, Proc, Biological 



Society of Washington, 1908, p. 116); specimens not taken. 

 1889. — Connecticut, Portland, young male, October 1 (John H. Sage) ; 



specimen preserved. 

 1889. — Province of Quebec, Tadousac, specimen taken July 20, 1889 ; now in 



collection of Dr. Jonathan Dwight, Jr., New York (J. H. Fleming, Ottawa 



Naturalist, Vol. XXII, 1907, p. 236). 

 1893. — Indiana, pair and nest taken by C. B. Brown of Chicago in spring 



of 1893 at English Lake; nest and eggs preserved in his collection 



(Ruthven Deane, Auk, 1895, p. 299). 

 1893. — Arkansas, Siloam Springs, last shipment live Pigeons to W. W. 



Judy & Co., St. Louis (Ruthven Deane, Auk, 1895, p. 298). 



1893. — Manitoba, Winnipeg, adult male taken; specimen mounted by Geo. 



E. Atkinson, Lake Winnepegosis, April 14 (J. H. Fleming, Auk, 1903, 

 p. 66). 



1894. — North Carolina, Buncombe County, female taken by J. S. Cairns, 

 October 20 (C. S. Brimley). 



1894. — Massachusetts, an adult female killed by Neil Casey at Melrose, 

 Mass., April 12, 1894; specimen preserved and mounted; now first recorded. 



1895. — Louisiana, Mandeville, near New Orleans, January 26, 1895, two 

 taken out of a flock of five by Dr. J. H. Lamb; one an immature male 

 (Prof. Geo. E. Beyer). 



1895. — Illinois, Lake Forest, August 7, young female in collection of John 



F. Ferry (Ruthven Deane, Auk, 1896, p. 81). 



1895. — Nebraska, Sarpy County, one killed out of fifteen or twenty, No- 

 vember 9, by Hon. Edgar Howard of Papillon, five miles southeast of 

 that place (Lawrence Bruner, Nebraska Birds, p. 84). 



1895. — Pennsylvania, Canadensis, Munroe County, specimen shot, Octo- 

 ber 23, by Mr. Geo. Stewart of Philadelphia, and now in his possession 

 (Witmer Stone). 



1896.— New Jersey, Englewood, June 23, immature female taken by 

 C. Irving Wood and mounted by J. Ullrich (F. M. Chapman, Auk, 



1896, p. 341). 



jggg Wisconsin, Delavan Lake, N. Hollister killed an immature male 



September 8, 1896 (Auk, 1896, p. 341); last Wisconsin record backed 

 by a specimen. 



