of William Cundall , whom he married in New London in 1832. The old parish register shows that the marriage was performed by the Reverend Christopher Milner of Sackville, N.B. The young couple lived at their Campbellton establishment, appropriately called BillĀ¬ ingsgate, for some two years. After their return to Mrs. Billing soon died, and her husband also died in 1840. A headstone in memory of their only child who died in infancy in 1833 still stands in St . Thomas's cemetery. A well, now fallen in, and an extensive depression in a shore field on a farm now (1959) owned by Walford McEwen of Campbellton , indicate where Billingsgate was situated. Another nearby property at the head of Mclntyre's Creek, a mill site where a broken dam may still be discerned, bore the local name of Billing's Bridge until living memory. Thus when the first St . Thomas Church was built it is evident that the community was prospering and giving promise of future growth. In 1827 the population of Lot 18 was 713, Lot 19, 481, and Lot 20, 415. L. C. Jenkins .jPfi William Walker