Birds of Upper St, John. 
BAtohelder. 
76. Hylotomus pileatus {Linn.) Bd. Pileated Woodpecker. — 
At Grand Falls half a dozen pairs were seen. Probably there is too little 
of the heavy forest left in the immediate neighborhood of Fort Fairfield 
to suit their tastes, as we did not meet with them. “Common” at Houlton. 
Bull. N.O.C. 7, July, *1882, p.l&O 
ts h clZ 6n cfme e ^l Merriam 
53. Hylotomus pileatus. Pileated Woodpecker. -Very rare. 
Mr. Comeau has shot but one here. 
Bull, 2LQ.O, 7, Cot, 1882, P.236 
A Collecting Trip-Dec . 1887 . 
Jobn Swart, Uarfcer, Ont. Can. 
Pileated Woodpecker. Tolerably common, 
but very wild and difficult to approach. Saw 
i some nearly every day, but owing to heavy 
crust on the snow, it was impossible to go 
through the woods quietly. Only obtained one 
specimen. 
O.& O. XIII. June. 1888 p.94 
SQr&sner Birds of Sudbury, Ont. 
Ibergsr. 
I '400. Pileafed Woodpecker. . Occasional. 
Said to be tolerably common during winter. 
Oj SO, XV. 5eae. 1890, Pr87 
Dwight, Summer Birds of 
Prince Edward Island. 
Ceophlceus pileatus. Pileated Woodpecker. — Said to have been 
formerly common. Prof. Earle showed me a stuffed specimen, but I found 
no other evidence, save hearsay, of its occurrence. No ‘mortise holes’ 
were discovered. 
Auk X, Jan, 1893. P« 0 * 
— /?*7, 
21. Ceophlceus pileatus. Pileated Woodpecker. — Three of these 
birds were met with July 30, near Haileybury. 
JT3 
iZamXjH cr^j T C a^a.c* a f 
PouCk~ 1 •. '4-oa*** , 
x*/v, 74 t 
158. Ceophlceus pileatus abieticola. Northern Pileated Wood- 
pecker. — Said to have been formerly a resident. I have seen specimens 
taken within twenty or thirty miles of Toronto some years ago, and I 
recently saw fresh workings of this woodpecker thirty-five miles from the- 
city, near Georgetown. 
