History for ready reference, Volume 1, A-Elba
volume 1, chapter 3.
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The above account, which fixes on Onondaga Lake the site of the Iroquois fort to which Champlain penetrated, does not agree with the views of Parkman, O'Callaghan, and some other historians, who trace Champlain's route farther westward in New York; but it accepts the conclusions reached by O. H. Marshall, J. V. H. Clark, and other careful students of the question. Mr. MacMullen, in the "History of Canada" quoted above, finds an extraordinary route for the expedition via Lakes Huron and St. Clair, to the vicinity of Detroit.
_J. V. H. Clark, History of Onondaga._
ALSO IN: _O. H. Marshall, Champlain's Expedition against the Onondagas.--Champlain's Voyages (Prince Society). 1880._
_E. B. O'Callaghan, editor, Doc. History of New York,