of Moses in Charlottctown in October of 1875. By that time there was a good school at Fullertons Marsh according to the annual school report. Schools had been present in Lot 48 since 1834, so the children of James and Margaret Lacey probably learned to read and write, unlike their parents. In February of 1876, the family members assembled to celebrate the wedding of their brother Jim to Margaret Hogan . The bride was the daughter of Roderick Hogan and Mary Joy from ( Lot 6 5). This wedding was held at Cathedral on February 15. It was a good time to have a wedding because the relatives of both bride and groom could travel across the frozen rivers to get easily and relatively quickly to town (the rough equivalent of a modern paved road). In addition, farm life was at a much reduced rate. The wedding guests would probably have returned to the home of the Hogans for a long night of eating, drinking and dancing. Someone would have had the foresight to run off the necessary quantity of moonshine. More than one wife might have to scold her husband into going home in the wee hours, (just when he was beginning to have fun!). Liquor was a curse to many of the Irish on P.E.I. For that reason there was a strong temperance movement among the Irish of P.E.I , at that time. It is equally possible, therefore, that the only alcohol available was to be had outside at someone's sleigh in the yard. I sus¬ pect that the Island tradition of keeping the drinks in the kitchen rather than in the front room may have stemmed from the temperance movement. In 1877 Jim and Margaret had their first child Moses Albinus . He was probably named after Jim's brother Moses, who had died two years earlier in Chariottetown. Unfortunately the young Moses died as an infant. In April of B878 a second child, Leo Albinus , was born, later that same month, Jim received word from Charlottctown of the death of his brother Peter. About this time a two-story house was moved on the ice from Mt. Herbert to replace the old log house, which would soon be converted into an outbuilding. My uncle Frank Doyle recalls that this house was called the "Pippy House". This event probably occurred between 1881, when a Pippy house appears on the Lot 48 ■nap in the 1880 Meacbams' Atlas and the completion of the Fullerton's Marsh bridge in 1884. We can imagine the excitement of the family at the prospect of moving into a new two-story house with a stone foundation under it, after living in a log house for so long. The previous fall, the hole would have toeen dug for the cellar and enough rock gathered for a foundation. The occupants of the farm on Doyles Point at that time and their ages were as follows: James (Jim) Doyle, aged 42 (Farmer); Margaret Doyle , aged 25 (Margaret 41