On February 20, 1884 a fire destroyed a row of buildings which had included Peter's boarding house. Where the family went to live then is only [peculation. The only trace of them that I have found after 1879 is James Peter , the oldest boy, at the St. Peter 's home of his uncle L.P. Doyle in 1891. The 1891 Census listsjames P. as the nephew of L.P . and lists his occupation as a "ccaler." word perhaps should be "Sealer", that is one who hunts seals. James Peter d in Charlottetown Hospital in 1896. (. Herald, April 8, 896.) JAMES & DOYLE (Jini or "Big Jim" also known as Red Jim, or The Red Irishman) Fifth Child of James Doyle and Margaret Lacey Jim, the third son, lived on the home place, and died relatively recently—July 1922. More is therefore known about him, and hence his story is somewhat longer and intertwines with that of the others. James B. Doyle was born July 28, 1838 at Mermaid , two years after his family moved there. At that time the family lived in the log house, and in addition to babyjim, other children in the family would be Margaret (9)[ycars], Pierce (5), Catherine (4), and Peter (2). Jim was destined to be a farmer, and to live out most of his life on the farm where he was born. When his father died in 1863, Jim became head of the farming operation. His parents had accomplished much since their voyage from County Wexford . They had raised twelve children, all of whom seemed to know the importance of hard work and caring about others. Jim was twenty-five in 1863 when he inherited all of the farm except for twenty acres near the shore. That twenty acres had been willed to his mother until she should die. Jim did not marry until 1876 when he was thirty-eight, his bride twenty-one. The couple would have fourteen children over a period of 22 years. To help him on the farm immediately after his father died, he had brothers William and Moses and sisters Catherine and Elizabeth. The two youngest ^ Children , Annie and John, would not be of much assistance for a while. Mary, ken eighteen, may have suffered from a mental illness. The Charlottetown Conference, the year following the death of James, would have caused some increased business for Peter and his new wife Helen (nee Neil) in their tavern and boarding house, as would the grand circus ■vhich visited Charlottetown that summer. It is probable, however, that life at ' Doyles Point that summer was little altered by the festivities. Jim or his mother may have received word from Piery in Summersidc telling that he was doing fine as a carpenter and that he and his wife Johanna had a new daughter Margaret. At this time Piery was building a house at for fThomas Crabbe, a local merchant. A memorable event for the young family occurred in the winter of 1864. On March seventh, the old chapel from St. Andrews was hauled down the ice from Mt. Stewart to Charlottetown . Five hundred men, both Protestants and 39