Indian Paths in the Great Metropolis
Armbruster says there are immense shell-beds on this island. D. B.
Austin states that these beds cover the area of the center of the island, and that they were probably debris from the manufacture of wampum. 53. Flushing (Map I). Site of a large village of the Matinecock chieftaincy.
Armbruster (Hist. L. I., its Early Days, etc., 1914) says eleven native burials were disturbed within the area of the Linnaean gardens in 1841, and in 1880 a burying ground, on which were stone artifacts, was disturbed on the Thomas P.
Duryea farm, a mile from Flushing. 54. Hog island (Map "I), situated in Brosewere bay, south of Hewlett. A station of the Rockaway chieftaincy, probably an appendage of the large village at Hewlett (55). 55.
Hewlett (Map I). About two miles beyond the boundary of Queens county, south of Valley Stream, was a native station of considerable extent. At this site many objects were discovered by George H.
Pepper in an exploration conducted for the Museum of the American Indian, Heye Foundation. 58. Cow bay (Map I). Site of a Matinecock village. This was explored in 1900 by M. R.