1915] 
Lowe: Birds of Green Lake County 
73 
Circus hudsonius (Linnaeus) Marsh Hawk 
A very common resident in all marshy and swampy places. 
Accipiter velox (Wilson). Sharp-Shinned Hawk 
Abundant during migrations. Rare during the summer. In 
July 1906 found a nest with four nestlings. 
Accipiter cooperi (Bonaparte). Cooper’s Hawk 
Very abundant during migrations and as a summer resident. 
Destructive to birds; three out of five stomachs examined con- 
tained birds, one a mouse, and one was empty. 
Buteo borealis borealis (Gmelin). Red Tailed Hawk 
A very common migrant and a not uncommon summer resi- 
dent in small groves and swamps. 
Buteo lineatus lineatus (Gmelin). Red-Shouldered Hawk 
A fine male taken April 6, 1905 on Black-bird Point, Green 
Lake. 
Buteo playtypterus (Vieillot). Broad-Winged Hawk. 
Common during migrations. Frequents marshes and follows 
along the rivers. 
Archibuteo lagopus sancti-johannis (Gmelin). Rough-Legged 
Hawk. 
A common migrant. 
Aquila chrysaetes (Linnaeus). Golden Eagle 
There was a fine mounted specimen in the Turner Hall at 
Princeton. It was taken in the grove at Big Bend on the Fox 
River. The writer was informed that it was accidentally de- 
stroyed in 1914. 
Haliaectus leucocephalus leucocephalus (Linnaeus). Bald 
Eagle 
A not uncommon migrant, especially in the spring when two 
or three may be seen about Green Lake. 
Falco columbarius columbarius Linnaeus. Pigeon Hawk 
A common migrant, rarely nesting. Two nests were found 
in a tamarack swamp west of Pine Bluff. 
