Hogan); Leo Albinus Doyle, aged 3; Margaret F. Doyle, aged 70 (Margaret Iacey); Anne Doyle aged 26; John Doyle aged 25(Carpenter); Mary Doyle, aged 36.

In February of 1882 my grandfather John James was born to Jim and Mar-pm. He remembered well stories of the house being transported on the ice, and it seemed a story important for him to tell.Jim's brother Piery may have lived with them for periods of time while building the Fullerton's Marsh Bridge in 1883-84. They may have had a visit from their brother William, who had recently begun operation of a furniture factory in Mt. Stewart. (William may have found it convenient to travel to Charlottetown, by boat or horse and sleigh, on the Hillsborough River, especially since his brother lived along the river.) Jim and Margaret had a new daughter christenchugusta May on March 10, 1883.

On January 1, 1884,1im and his mother had a legal agreement drawn up. Margaretaacey) agreed togivcupallof the Point propertywillcd to herby her husband, in exchange for a yearly rent of eighty dollars to be paid to her until her death. The rent was to be paid in quarterly payments of $20 with an additional $30 payment at her death to cover funeral expenses. (Queen’s County conveyance # L19 F921)

This agreement allowed her to move to Charlottetown with her own unmarried children, Annie andJohn. It is believed that her daughter Mary was committed to Falconwood at that time. Thus Jim and Margaret and their children John and May were left alone on the farm. This situation had the advantage of privacy but disadvantages from a labor viewpoint. It is probable that Leo Albinus died that year.

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