July 4 of 1888 saw Jim's wife Margaret purchasing a graveyard plot (plot* 433) in the new (ccm3) graveyard near St . Pius X Church (Cem#3) for the burial f his infant son James who died at age 6 months. James was one of four children born into this family who died in infancy. Records of burials of two f the children arc not in the church register. This probably means that they were baptized at home and died as infants. It was customary to bury infants within the grave of some previously buried family member. A shallow grave would be dug directly over the earlier grave and the infant interred there. The Canadian Government Census of 1891 describes the Doyles of Lot 48 as follows: NAME SEX AGE R* PBF OCCUPA' R& W M /S Doyal[sic] James M 42 Ire . Farmer yes M Margaret F. F 25 W Ire. yes M Margaret G. F 11 D PEI yes John J. M 9 S PEI yes Augusta M. F 7 D PEI yes Mary A. F 5 D PEI Joseph P. M 2 S PEI R*= Relation to head of household. Note that Doyle was misspelled as Doyal on the census record. Margaret A. Doyle (nee Hogan) is incor¬ rectly recorded as Margaret F. PBF = Place of birth of father. R&W= Read and Write M/ S = Married or Single. In the year 1892, the year after their son William was born, we get a unique glimpse at the Doyle farm because of a loan made to Jim Doyle by Patrick Duffy . This was done through lawyer John Tcllish . (Chattel Mortgage #5489) The collateral for the loan of $145 tells us that the animals on the farm were as follows: One old marc color black and foal; One mare 4 yrs old color red; One horse 4 yrs old color red; One poll cow red and white in color; One cow color light red and white; One heifer 2 yrs. old color black and white; One heifer 2 yrs. old color red and white. This was also the year of the catastrophic fire in St. John's Newfoundland , ■im Doyle is listed in the Guardian among the contributors to the massive Irelief fund mounted on P.E.I , to aid the homeless. The large Irish population I in Newfoundland caused Islanders to respond generously. As previously | stated, Jim's brother John went to Newfoundland at that time to work as a I carpenter helping to rebuild the devastated city. In March of 1894, Leo Francis Doyle was born tojim and Margaret (Hogan). I The third Leo born into this family, he was the only one to survive childhood. i It was customary to name a child after an infant who previously died in the family. Leo moved to Charlottetown as a young man. Like many of the Doyles , Ihe was destined to be a carpenter. Leo became a very successful building 59