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Chappell 1776: '[got wood for] an oak frame '. Curtis 1775: 'some few oaks’.

‘J v 9 'some oaks’in the original , " ' ”l forest at New London‘

Holland 1765 (Oct): Lot 24: 'some oak’. » \ L \ // I // M9 \\ xxx; Bain 1890: there was once a large or :44 As” \ 6% E oak forest at Tracacfi. 1 1 x 7 me A‘ - “\«r T \ x j A 3‘2»? l 77; \ ‘v j 1 EL ¥ ( “,3 r) l r \ \ Kw \x . F f&, [Lawson] 1877-1878. f4

, fMKY/l‘ :3 K //4// J ' I , Lm-V‘ALfi/fiia‘ V/fagfi 4_\ 771‘ 4‘ [Watson] post 1904: ' // t ' 'Red oak at Kensington, Searletown, No “fin River and Charlottetown Royalty W st. ,_ [Lawson] 1877-1878: / At Point Pn'm: old oak wood {$61312 ’preserved in the turf of swamps' x2) 3/

FIGURE 1-10. The geographically-Iocatable references to oak in the records of the British period.