the Laccy family appear in the next generation among the Doylcs. Some will appear in the fourth and fifth generation. It is possible that Mary Laccy , who married John Mutch of Mermaid , was the Mary contained in the Adamstown register, baptized Dec. 10,1817,achildofPierccLaccyand Catherine Gaffncy . A headstone marking the grave of Piery Laccy , Margaret's father and Lawrence Lacey , Margaret's brother, who died at age nineteen, still stands in the old Roman Catholic cemetery #1 on the St. Peters Road . William and his mother are probably buried there also. Many of the Irish immigrants were too poor to erect gravestones to the memory of their loved ones, and the church records of burials back then cither never existed, or have been lost. For these reasons it is difficult to know where people were buried. In 1828 James Doyle , thirty-two years old, married a seventeen year old Chariottctown native, Margaret Laccy . (Catholics at that time did not have the right to vote, but they were allowed to marry!) The wedding would have taken place in the first wooden church, erected in 1816 at the site of the present Basilica . A simple log structure, this church was built with money solicited from local Catholics. One who gave a donation of 5 pounds (a considerable amount in those days) was John Doyle . The officiating priest would have been Father Fitzgerald who served in Chariottctown during that year. (Burke 7) James by that time would have a friend to act as best man, possibly the above mentioned John Doyle , a tailor and businessman who ran a hotel, Tbe Hibernia, located where the Golden Wok Restaurant now stands, on the corner of Pownal and Grafton Streets . Margaret Laccy 's recently widowed mother would no doubt be in attendance, possibly with her reluctant twerve- ycar-old son William in tow. The small wedding party may have gathered at the hotel, and had dinner served by John's wife Catherine. The bride and groom could well have spent their wedding night at that establishment, or simply gone to James' current lodgings. The farm which would become known as Doylcs Point, was occupied at this time by an Irish family from County Cork by the name of Daley. The Point farm was leased in 1799 by Jeremiah Dailcy , a farmer who later lived in Chariottctown. He is listed as a "gentleman", suggesting that he was a man of some means—an owner of property. Jeremiah had purchased the lease from James Cunningham , one of the original proprietors of Lot 48. (After the British defeated the French, and the French setUers [Acadians) were expelled in 1758, the British Government decided to hold a lottery for the land of St. John's Island [ P.E.I. ]. The Island had been surveyed into 67 Townships (or Lots), of approximately 20,000 acres each by Surveyor General Samuel Holland in 1764-1765. Sixty-four of these lots were actually "up for grabs". Those eligible to enter the lottery were people of influence with the king. Some were politicians, others military men, still others were merchants or civil servants. The lottery was held in London July 23, 1767. James Cunningham and his partner Samuel Touchct drew Lot 48. This meant that they owned Lot 48, provided they fulfilled certain obligations, and were called "proprietors".) IK