REPORT OF THE UNITED STATES GEOGRAPHIC BOARD. 
7a 
Coleman; Pinnacle, on ridge extending 
from Mount Baker, northeasterly to 
Mount Shuksan, the divide between 
headwaters of Wells Creek and those of 
Swift Creek, Whatcom County, Wash. 
Colerain; Town and Township, Bertie 
County, N. C. (Not Coleraine.) 
Colerain; Coleraine, Mass.; see Colrain. 
Coleridge; Village, Cedar County, Nebr. 
(Xot Cooleridge.) 
Coles; Brook, chiefly in Middlefield, 
Berkshire County, Mass. (Not Cole's.) 
Colfax; Peak, one of Black Buttes group, 
southwestern slope Mount Baker, What- 
com County, Wash. 
Collaberg; Lake and Mountain, Cort- 
landt Town, Westchester County, N. Y. 
(Not Colabaugh nor Collabergh.) 
Collahergh; see Collaberg. 
Collamore; Ledge of sunken rocks on 
Massachusetts coast, near Scituate. 
(Not Colomore.) 
Collbran; see Brandon. 
College; see Dorseys; Sequatchie. 
College; Point, in College Fiord, sepa- 
rating the fiords formed by the Harvard 
and Yale Glaciers, near lat. 61° 12' N., 
long. 147° 48^ Prince WilUam Sound, 
Alaska. 
College Point; Village, Queens County, 
Long Island, N. Y. (Not Strattonport.) 
Collier; Ledge off south coast of Cape 
Cod, near Hyannis, Mass. (Not Col- 
lier's.) 
Collins; Collinson^s; see Cummings. 
Cologne; Railroad Station Atlantic 
County, N. J. (Not Germania.) 
Colombia; Republic, South America. 
(Not Columbia.) 
Colombo; Capital of Ceylon. (Not Co- 
lumbo.) 
Colon; City and free Port on the Atlantic 
coast of the Isthmus of Panama, Repub- 
lic of Panama. Founded in 1850 by the 
Panama Railroad Co., and named for 
WilUam H. Aspinwall, one of the rail- 
road company's principal shareholders, 
and afterwards president of the Pacific 
Mail Steamship Co. The official name 
given the city by the Colombian Gov- 
ernment is Colon, the Spanish form of 
the patronymic of Christopher Colum- 
bus. Designated as "Aspinwall" by 
the United States Government from the 
year of its foundation until 1882. The 
Colombian name was adopted in the 
latter year and has since appeared in 
the printed diplomatic and consular list 
of the Department of State as "Colon 
(Aspinwall)," Colon being recognized 
as the proper form, and Aspinwall ad- 
ded in parenthesis merely for the pur- 
pose of distinguishing the place for the 
guidance of persons unfamiliar with the 
Colombian name — A. H. A. 
Colonels; see Purnell. 
Colonia; Railroad Station, Middlesex 
County, N. J. (Not Houtenville.) 
Colonnade; CUff, of columnar basalt 
along lower end of South Mowich Gla- 
cier, Mount Rainier, Pierce County^ 
Wash. 
Colorado; River, the great river of the 
plateau region flowing into the Gulf of 
California. (Not Rio Colorado.) 
Colorado, Ariz.; see Coconino. 
Colorado, Colo.; see Front. 
Colorado Chiquito; see LUtle Colorado. 
Colquet; see Cloquet. 
*Colrain; Town, Franklin County, Mass. 
(Not Colerain nor Coleraine.) 
Colt; Pier, below Hartford, Connecticut 
River, Conn. (Not Colt's.) 
Colter; Pea^k, southeast of Yellowstone 
Lake, Yellowstone National Park, 
Wyo. (Not Coulter.) 
Colton; see Cotton. 
Columbia Crest; snow dome, highest 
summit, at conjunction of rims of two 
summit craters. Mount Rainier, Pierce 
County, Wash. 
Columbia Finger; Mountain Peak, Yo- 
semite National Park, Mariposa County, 
Cal. (Not Columbia's Finger.) 
Columbia's Finger; see Columbia Finger. 
Columbine; Falls, on Roaring Fork, in 
East Gorge, 1 mile northeast of Longs 
Peak, on the line between Boulder and 
Larimer Counties, Colo. 
Columbine; see Ignacio. 
Column; see Stolbovoi. 
Colville; River, in Northern Alaska. 
(Not Cohdle.) 
Comanche; Point, Vishnu quadrangle, 
Coconino County, Ariz. 
Comandante; Shoal, about 1 mile south 
of Caballo Blanco, P. R. (Not Cayo 
Comandante.) 
