COMPREHENSIVE LIST 



§t| — *Grasshopper Sparrow. S.R., 

 N.C.S. 

 Common. Possibly less so 

 in the Chicago Area than 

 formerly. 

 § — *HensIow's Sparrow. S.R., 

 N.C.S. 



Common in some locali- 

 ties, but rather locally dis- 

 tributed. 



§Leconte's Sparrow. 



Recorded by Abbott as 

 breeding in N. E. 111., but 

 record questioned. How- 

 ever, egg specimens, repre- 

 senting the foregoing, and 

 reported from this state, 

 were pronounced by the 

 Smithsonian authorities as 

 belonging to this bird 

 (Ford). 



§Nelson's Sparrow. S.R., N. 



Not common. Chiefly T. 

 V. Reported by Woodruff 

 as a breeder in N. E. 111., 

 and nesting within the Chi- 

 cago Area. 



§t$— *Lark Sparrow. S.R., N.C.S. 

 Of local distribution and 

 apparently not as common 

 as formerly; at least in N. 

 111. 

 Harris's Sparrow. T.V. 



Irregular visitor from far- 

 ther west. Records fairly 

 numerous, and more regu- 

 lar in recent y^ars. 



White-crowned Sparrow. 

 T.V. 



Possibly a rare breeder in 

 extreme Northern Illinois, 

 as it is known to be a cas- 

 ual S. R. in Southern Wis- 

 consin, and according to 

 Kumlein and HoUister, has 

 nested near Madison. Dr. 

 Hoy also reports a few 

 nesting near Racine. 



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