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Indian Relics for Peabody

NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED

Dr. Samuel A. Green '51, of Boston, has recently presented to the Peabody Museum a valuable collection of Indian relics. The collection, to which Dr. Green gave a great part of his life, consists of stone implements unearthed in Massachusetts and southern New Hampshire, Indian adz-blades, axes, scrapers, soapstone vessels, pottery fragments, and the stone points of spears and arrows. Many of the specimens were found near Dr. Green's home at Groton, Mass. Several came from Norton, Concord, Martha's Vineyard, Webster, Cambridge, and from Teverton, R. I. Most of the implements are relics of the Algonquins of New England, while a few were discovered in the country of the Iroquois of New York. There are two specimens of unusual interest, a pottery vessel in perfect preservation from Canterbury, N. H., and another vessel from Groton, N. H., practically intact.

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