Cambridge, Mass.
1901.
June 27
(No 3)
  7. Song Sparrow. - Three or four males in full song. I also
started up a bird which chirped anxiously and 
which evidently had young not far off. This is the
only locality (excepting the Fresh Pond swamps) within
our city limits where I have found Song Sparrows
breeding regularly & commonly in recent years.
  8. English Sparrows. - Not more than five or six seen or heard
and all of these were in one place.
  9. Bobolink. - A male in full song in the piece of grass
land above mentioned. The grass, although not tall,
was very dense and intermingled with much red
clover. There can be little doubt, I think, that
the bird was breeding there. It is the only 
locality within our city limits where I have seen
one in summer for several years.
  10. Baltimore Oriole. One in full song.
  11. Bronzed grackle. Broods of young Grackles accompanied
by their parents were scattered about everywhere
feeding on the cultivated land or along the margin
of the brook and flying to and from the salt
marshes. I must have seen at least 20 birds in all.
  12. Red-winged Blackbird. - One, apparently an old bird
but of which sex I could not determine, flew
into the top of a leafy tree near the
edge of the flat where it borders on the
Cemetery grounds.
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