Samuel Arbing of Millcove , to build a cement foundation and a stone fireplace; Norman Brown of was the carpenter for the new cottage. The Mutches and their family had many years of pleasure from this summer home; in 1972 Mrs. Allie Mutch sold it to Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Wood . Some other early bayside cottages: next to the Mutch property, Bert Warren bought land from "Aunt Em" MacMillan in 1933 and built a cottage, now owned by his daughter Louise Warren . At the other end of the , Louis Shaw bought two-fifths of an acre from Arthur Shaw and built, in 1930, a summer cottage ??? " Sir Louis bungalo" of the poem. On the side, the first summer cottage belonged to Dr. James E . Blanchard of Charlottetown , who bought 40 acres of land in 1925 from Frank McCabe ; this was a long narrow strip running from the to the Bay between the Hudson and Shaw properties. Two cottages were built near the shore on this land: Dr. Blanchard 's, near the cliff edge, where the canteen is today; and Mr. Harry Stewart 's. When land was expropriated for the in 1937, both cottages were moved back inland, beyond the new Park boundary. In 1963 both cottages and land were bought from the estate of Dr. J.E. Blanchard by J.M. Lee and his son Jim Lee , and the cottages formed the nucleus of Lee's Tourist Cottages , of which there are now six. In the early 1950s Dr. Blanchard sold some land to Mr. "Windy" LePage who built a small cottage on it; in 1955 both land and cottage were sold to Dr. L.I. Duffy . The cottage was bought by Lea Misener who moved it to a site behind Stanhope School, where the Misener family lived in it until their new home was built nearer the . Dr. F.A. MacMillan of Charlottetown bought land in 1957 next to the former LePage property and built his cottage the next year. In his Will, Dr?? Blanchard left the unsold part of his land to his housekeeper, Clarice McTague, who now owns 1.91 acres here. Returning to the Bay side, in 1930 Marcus Calder bought land for a cottage from James Curtis Lawson , who also sold land next to the Calder lot to Arthur Affleck in 1931, and to the Rev. D.K. Ross in 1933; these three cottages, with those of Bert Warren and Louis Shaw previously mentioned, were the earliest on this side of the peninsula. Edward Heaney also had a summer cottage here from 1933 on, on 2 acres of land. Later, in 1936, Marcus Calder purchased 62 acres here, with Hilbert Frizzell , this being part of the original "Dollery Farm"; at present, this piece of land is owned by 32 cottagers, some of whose properties have changed hands several times, illustrating the com?? plexity of land tenure in Stanhope . For this reason, lists of cottage owners under the headings of the original farms may be found in the appendix. 238