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<line l="1875" t="2774" r="1879" b="2781"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">■</formatting></line></par>
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<line l="1048" t="1044" r="1956" b="1356"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">w-^ffiS^</formatting></line></par>
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<line l="1326" t="2210" r="1872" b="2286"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">P.EI. COLLECTION</formatting></line></par>
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<line l="1164" t="2302" r="2032" b="2374"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">U.P.EI. ROBERTSON LIBRARY</formatting></line></par>
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<line l="1312" t="2394" r="1886" b="2460"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">LIBRARY USE ONLY</formatting></line></par>
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<line l="249" t="2478" r="284" b="2484"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">■ ■■</formatting></line></par>
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<par leftIndent="146" startIndent="-146" lineSpacing="99">
<line l="1194" t="392" r="1709" b="440"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ST ALEXIS PARISH;&quot;</formatting></line>
<line l="1340" t="498" r="1612" b="536"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ROLLO BAY</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="21" lineSpacing="99">
<line l="1215" t="597" r="1696" b="639"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">A BRIEF HISTORY.</formatting></line></par>
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<par leftIndent="417">
<line l="628" t="207" r="1676" b="255"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">A BRIEF HISTORY OF ST ALEXIS FARISH</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="13" rightIndent="18" lineSpacing="50">
<line l="236" t="305" r="2124" b="356"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">When in 1755 the dastardly edict went forth which commanded the</formatting></line>
<line l="236" t="358" r="2064" b="408"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the expulsion of the Acadians from Grand Pre on the shores of</formatting></line>
<line l="236" t="409" r="2117" b="464"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the Bay of Fundy, six families, more fortunate than the others,</formatting></line>
<line l="232" t="460" r="2098" b="513"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">managed to keep together.  They suspected treachery underlying</formatting></line>
<line l="235" t="510" r="2210" b="558"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Captain Murray&apos;s proclamation which was set for them at Grand Pre,</formatting></line>
<line l="236" t="561" r="2215" b="615"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">They did not repair to the church, but concealed themselves in the</formatting></line>
<line l="232" t="613" r="2250" b="664"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">woods and from their hiding place they witnessed their homes burned</formatting></line>
<line l="229" t="665" r="2118" b="716"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and their flocks scattered,  Having prepared some large canoes,</formatting></line>
<line l="234" t="714" r="1974" b="760"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">they made their way across the strait to &quot;lie St Jean&quot; and</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="764" r="2183" b="815"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">landed at Point Prim.  These people were John and Ambrose Bourque</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="812" r="2217" b="861"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and their families, Joseph Pitres and family, Honore Michel (Black</formatting></line>
<line l="230" t="865" r="2097" b="913"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">smith) and wife, no family, — Leblanc and family, — Chaisson</formatting></line>
<line l="227" t="919" r="2187" b="963"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and family.  When they arrived at Point Prim, they knelt down and</formatting></line>
<line l="228" t="969" r="2186" b="1015"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">gave thanks to God for having delivered out of the hands of their</formatting></line>
<line l="227" t="1021" r="2156" b="1069"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">enemies, and for bringing to a place of refuge.  After which, so</formatting></line>
<line l="229" t="1073" r="2214" b="1117"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">tradition says, they made the best feast they could to cheer every¬</formatting></line>
<line l="226" t="1124" r="2034" b="1171"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">body.  Finding after a short sojourn at Point Prim that they</formatting></line>
<line l="226" t="1175" r="2128" b="1219"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">were net safe from the English, who at that time were stationed</formatting></line>
<line l="224" t="1225" r="2066" b="1271"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">at Port-la-Joie, they took their canoes and paddled up to 3ay</formatting></line>
<line l="224" t="1275" r="2006" b="1322"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Fortune where they were joined by five or six families from</formatting></line>
<line l="227" t="1326" r="790" b="1367"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">St Peter&apos;s Harbour.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="5" rightIndent="83" lineSpacing="50">
<line l="227" t="1425" r="2003" b="1472"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">These people had been suffering from the measles when their</formatting></line>
<line l="223" t="1478" r="2127" b="1524"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">unfortunate countrymen were shipped from St Peter&apos;s, and, being</formatting></line>
<line l="224" t="1529" r="2062" b="1575"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">too ill to be moved, escaped expatriation.  A few families of</formatting></line>
<line l="224" t="1580" r="2094" b="1626"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Chlveries, D&apos;Aigles, and others who were concealed or lived at</formatting></line>
<line l="225" t="1631" r="2031" b="1675"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Savage Harbour removed later to Little River to the south of</formatting></line>
<line l="222" t="1679" r="2060" b="1728"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Bay Fortune(Now Little Pond).  During the first few few years</formatting></line>
<line l="223" t="1731" r="2182" b="1778"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">that these Acadians spent in Bay Fortune they refused to take the</formatting></line>
<line l="221" t="1783" r="1962" b="1829"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">oath of allegiance and were regarded as prisioners of war,</formatting></line>
<line l="217" t="1835" r="2185" b="1879"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Every Spring officers from Port-la-Joie would come in the name of</formatting></line>
<line l="221" t="1884" r="2132" b="1929"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the king to take account of the seed that they sowed and in th«.</formatting></line>
<line l="216" t="1936" r="2152" b="1982"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Autumn thes same licensed oppressors would arrive to relieve the</formatting></line>
<line l="218" t="1988" r="2032" b="2032"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">poor Acadians of their hardly won crops, leaving them barely</formatting></line>
<line l="219" t="2039" r="1903" b="2083"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">sufficient to sustain life throughtout the cruel winter.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="4" rightIndent="32" lineSpacing="51">
<line l="220" t="2142" r="2236" b="2187"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Some of the women of Bay Fortune determined to evade the injusticej</formatting></line>
<line l="215" t="2193" r="2126" b="2238"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">as fast as the grain was threshed, they would conceal a portion</formatting></line>
<line l="217" t="2244" r="2184" b="2290"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of it in their clothing and carry it away to the woods where they</formatting></line>
<line l="215" t="2295" r="2145" b="2340"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">would hide it and thus secure an extra store.  After some years,</formatting></line>
<line l="217" t="2346" r="2186" b="2391"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">seeing that there was no other course open to them they submitted</formatting></line>
<line l="218" t="2397" r="2183" b="2443"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to the inevitable, took the oath of allegiance and wer$graciously</formatting></line>
<line l="215" t="2448" r="2093" b="2495"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">permitted to have undisputed possession of the fruits of their</formatting></line>
<line l="218" t="2500" r="2032" b="2548"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">industry.  They, however, made one proviso, that they should</formatting></line>
<line l="216" t="2551" r="1599" b="2596"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">never take up arms against the King of France,</formatting></line></par>
<par lineSpacing="51">
<line l="216" t="2648" r="2083" b="2700"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">In the year 1798, the proprietor of Lot 43, William Townshend,</formatting></line>
<line l="212" t="2706" r="2083" b="2751"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">an Englishman, came to claim the land surrounding Bay Fortune,</formatting></line>
<line l="217" t="2756" r="2155" b="2800"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The Acadian settlers refused to acknowledge Mr Townshend&apos;s claim</formatting></line>
<line l="214" t="2806" r="2121" b="2851"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to the land on the grounds of their being possessed of a letter</formatting></line>
<line l="214" t="2857" r="2124" b="2896"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of recommendation from the British officer xvho had administered</formatting></line>
<line l="215" t="2908" r="2122" b="2954"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to them the oath of allegiance.  This paper specified that they</formatting></line>
<line l="213" t="2960" r="2156" b="3006"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">were re-instated in their property as securely as when they held</formatting></line>
<line l="214" t="3012" r="2181" b="3053"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">it under Louis XVT of France,  The matter was taken to the courts</formatting></line>
<line l="211" t="3063" r="2268" b="3107"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and Mr Townshend wonj the Acadians were forced to leave Bay Fortune,</formatting></line></par>
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<par leftIndent="1525">
<line l="1760" t="189" r="1807" b="228"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">2.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="20" rightIndent="5" lineSpacing="51">
<line l="263" t="291" r="2265" b="346"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The greater number -went to Cape Breton, but about fourteen families</formatting></line>
<line l="260" t="343" r="2025" b="392"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">3ourques, Pitres, Chaissons and Peters removed to Rollo Bay</formatting></line>
<line l="257" t="395" r="2059" b="441"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">wh(;re they purchased lands from the late John Cmmbridge upon</formatting></line>
<line l="257" t="444" r="2086" b="492"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">which they settled in the year 1801 or 1802.  Two families of</formatting></line>
<line l="256" t="495" r="2148" b="543"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Longue-epee went to Souris, where the Chiveries of Little River</formatting></line>
<line l="255" t="547" r="2144" b="594"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">removed some years later.  The old burial ground at Bay Fortune</formatting></line>
<line l="257" t="599" r="1957" b="651"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">is still discernible on the property of Mr Charles Aitken,</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="17" rightIndent="31" lineSpacing="50">
<line l="257" t="700" r="2116" b="743"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">There had been in the time of the French Occupation a Catholic</formatting></line>
<line l="257" t="752" r="2026" b="795"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Church at Bay Fortune, but it fell into ruins and was never</formatting></line>
<line l="253" t="802" r="2239" b="851"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">replaced by the Acadians,  &apos;Travelling missionaries frequently held</formatting></line>
<line l="254" t="853" r="2145" b="894"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">stations in thesettlement in the house of Honore Michel who was</formatting></line>
<line l="252" t="904" r="2116" b="950"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">a prosperous blacksmith without a family.  The first priest of</formatting></line>
<line l="252" t="955" r="2083" b="1004"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">whom there is mention made as having served these Acadians is</formatting></line>
<line l="255" t="1005" r="2086" b="1049"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Monsieur Magdandj then came a Monsieur Ledru whose letters to</formatting></line>
<line l="254" t="1056" r="2142" b="1100"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the Bishop of Quebec may be seen in the Archives of the Diocese</formatting></line>
<line l="252" t="1107" r="750" b="1146"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of Charlottetown.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="12" rightIndent="65" lineSpacing="50">
<line l="248" t="1206" r="2085" b="1252"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">After Monsieur Ledru&apos;s departure the next priest to visit Bay</formatting></line>
<line l="249" t="1257" r="2205" b="1306"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Fortune was the Abbe de Calonne who, sent by the Bishop of Quebec</formatting></line>
<line l="251" t="1308" r="2138" b="1352"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to make Inquiries as to the state of the Church in lie St Jean,</formatting></line>
<line l="247" t="1360" r="2059" b="1406"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">established himself near Port-La-Joie, on what is now called</formatting></line>
<line l="251" t="1410" r="2204" b="1455"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the Warren Farms, whence he started on various missions throught-</formatting></line>
<line l="249" t="1461" r="687" b="1501"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">out the Island.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="14">
<line l="249" t="1562" r="2175" b="1606"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Soon after his arrival it chanced that  one, Germain Chaisson, of</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="12">
<line l="247" t="1614" r="2208" b="1659"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Bay Fortune fell ill of the small-pox,   A messenger was dispatched</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="8" rightIndent="96" lineSpacing="51">
<line l="248" t="1663" r="2174" b="1710"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to Fort-La-Joie and the priest set out  to administer the consol¬</formatting></line>
<line l="243" t="1715" r="1290" b="1760"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ations of religion to the sick man.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="3" lineSpacing="51">
<line l="247" t="1816" r="2055" b="1861"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">There was no &quot;royal road&quot; to duty for the brother of a first</formatting></line>
<line l="242" t="1869" r="2168" b="1915"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">minister of France,  Through dense forests and treacherous togs,</formatting></line>
<line l="244" t="1922" r="2174" b="1967"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">over meadows on which the summer sun beat piteously, across bays</formatting></line>
<line l="241" t="1973" r="2054" b="2018"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and rivers, on foot and by canoe the good priest pursued his</formatting></line>
<line l="242" t="2022" r="2237" b="2068"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">weary way.  When he arrived at Chalsson&apos;s house, he found the sick</formatting></line>
<line l="242" t="2074" r="2086" b="2119"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">man almost smothered for want of air, and proceeded to give a</formatting></line>
<line l="242" t="2125" r="2269" b="2171"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">lesson In hygiene by opening all doors and windows.  Having revived</formatting></line>
<line l="244" t="2175" r="2205" b="2221"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the patient,  he heard his confession and remained with him until</formatting></line>
<line l="242" t="2226" r="2088" b="2270"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">his death which occured shortly after.  This Germain Chaisson</formatting></line>
<line l="239" t="2279" r="2086" b="2323"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">was considered quite a scholar in his day and was also a very</formatting></line>
<line l="240" t="2329" r="2144" b="2374"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">good man, one who made a point of collecting the inhabitants of</formatting></line>
<line l="241" t="2379" r="2119" b="2424"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the settlement and reading the prayers of the Church to them on</formatting></line>
<line l="241" t="2430" r="2176" b="2476"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Sundays and rloly Days when they were without a priest. Naturally</formatting></line>
<line l="239" t="2481" r="2235" b="2527"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">he was much esteemed and all his neighbours, protestant as well as</formatting></line>
<line l="242" t="2532" r="2174" b="2575"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">catholic flocked to his funeral.  The Abbe de Calonne seized the</formatting></line>
<line l="239" t="2583" r="2057" b="2627"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">opportunity to preach a very clear and practical instruction</formatting></line>
<line l="238" t="2633" r="2270" b="2681"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">over the grave, one which made a deep impression upon all who heard</formatting></line>
<line l="239" t="2685" r="1986" b="2731"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">it, and of which their descendants talked about for years,</formatting></line></par>
<par rightIndent="4" lineSpacing="51">
<line l="235" t="2787" r="2026" b="2835"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">After the Abbe Calonne, came Abbe Gabriel Champion and then</formatting></line>
<line l="236" t="2840" r="2054" b="2885"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Father Aeneas Bernard MacEachern, afterwards first Bishop of</formatting></line>
<line l="238" t="2891" r="2057" b="2938"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Charlottetown, under whose direction was built the first log</formatting></line>
<line l="239" t="2938" r="2118" b="2988"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">chapel in the year 180^.  At this time there were but eighteen</formatting></line>
<line l="236" t="2995" r="2266" b="3042"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">families in the parish and they all assisted in the building of the</formatting></line>
<line l="235" t="3046" r="2118" b="3093"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">little church which was but thirty feet in length by twenty in</formatting></line></par>
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<par leftIndent="1688">
<line l="1800" t="238" r="1845" b="280"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">3.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="30" rightIndent="182" lineSpacing="51">
<line l="147" t="329" r="2033" b="381"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">breadth and twelve feet high,  it was dedicated to St Alexis by</formatting></line>
<line l="146" t="381" r="2121" b="436"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Bishop Plessis on July 17, lgi2, and stood down close to the shore</formatting></line>
<line l="145" t="434" r="2092" b="489"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">beside the old burying ground where sleep the pioneer settlers of</formatting></line>
<line l="144" t="484" r="2028" b="534"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Hollo Bay,  There are no very old tombstones to be seen in this</formatting></line>
<line l="142" t="536" r="2150" b="585"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ancient cemetery5 those placed there in the early days were made of</formatting></line>
<line l="142" t="588" r="1389" b="641"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">old red sand stone and have crumbled away.</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="16" lineSpacing="50">
<line l="143" t="691" r="2234" b="741"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The second church was built in 1824,  The builder was Bartlett Dunphy.</formatting></line>
<line l="142" t="740" r="2332" b="794"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The third church was built in I653 by Lawrence Murphy and Lawrence Peters</formatting></line>
<line l="141" t="792" r="2148" b="846"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">It stood on rising ground overlooking one cf the fairest landscapes</formatting></line>
<line l="139" t="842" r="2244" b="895"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of Prince Edward Island until it was replaced by the present inspiring</formatting></line>
<line l="138" t="889" r="2090" b="941"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">structure in 1930.  On this spot, the line of vision is broken by</formatting></line>
<line l="138" t="943" r="2182" b="991"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">two beautiful bays, the points of land that separate them being high</formatting></line>
<line l="134" t="994" r="2118" b="1040"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and well wooded in parts, while the farms thereon give evidence of</formatting></line>
<line l="133" t="1044" r="2148" b="1095"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">great fertility.  This church was sixty feet in length by forty-two</formatting></line>
<line l="136" t="1095" r="2147" b="1145"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">in widths the height of the wall was twenty-two feet.  Between 1870</formatting></line>
<line l="132" t="1142" r="1689" b="1189"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">and I872 a sanctuary and vestibule were added to it.</formatting></line>
<line l="136" t="1196" r="1969" b="1247"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The high altar which came from Montreal was delicately though</formatting></line>
<line l="131" t="1247" r="2120" b="1297"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">profusely colored in blue and gold with touches of pink, grey, and</formatting></line>
<line l="130" t="1297" r="1994" b="1347"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">brown,  The frontal was carton plerre, a representation of the</formatting></line>
<line l="130" t="1347" r="2175" b="1399"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Last Supper In bas-relief,  Above the altar was a fine stained-glass</formatting></line>
<line l="130" t="1398" r="2145" b="1445"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">window representing the Holy Family,  (Ihis window is now above the</formatting></line>
<line l="128" t="1449" r="2174" b="1497"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">altar in New Zealand Mission Church which was built in 1932 to servo</formatting></line>
<line l="131" t="1499" r="899" b="1543"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the people of that area,).</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="11" rightIndent="128" lineSpacing="51">
<line l="132" t="1601" r="2052" b="1649"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The cemetery of Hollo Bay is considered oy  some to be one of the</formatting></line>
<line l="127" t="1652" r="2178" b="1696"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">most beautiful on the Island,  It lies to the east of the church and</formatting></line>
<line l="128" t="1704" r="1993" b="1750"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">is shaded by many graceful white birch trees.  The monument to</formatting></line>
<line l="125" t="1756" r="2204" b="1805"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Reverend Edward Walker, D,D. who served as pastor for forty-six years</formatting></line>
<line l="123" t="1807" r="1530" b="1853"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">adds grace and beauty to this city of the Dead,</formatting></line></par>
<par rightIndent="95" lineSpacing="51">
<line l="128" t="1907" r="2146" b="1960"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">This parish possesses several relics of the past, the dearest among</formatting></line>
<line l="126" t="1958" r="2204" b="2011"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">them which is the bell,  Long ago in the dim past the English govern¬</formatting></line>
<line l="123" t="2010" r="2082" b="2058"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">ment being determined to get rid of the French Inhabitants of the</formatting></line>
<line l="125" t="2060" r="2237" b="2106"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">then populous little town of St Pierre situated on the harbour of that</formatting></line>
<line l="123" t="2114" r="2021" b="2163"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">name, sent three hundred of the French adrift in a leaky vessel</formatting></line>
<line l="119" t="2165" r="2187" b="2211"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">avowedly with the intention of transporting them to France,  Before .</formatting></line>
<line l="121" t="2213" r="2145" b="2261"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">leaving, these poor people as was the custom of the Acadians buried</formatting></line>
<line l="121" t="2266" r="2142" b="2311"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">such things as they considered too sacred to fall into the hands of</formatting></line>
<line l="122" t="2315" r="2173" b="2365"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the English, among which was their church bell.  In 1870 a Mr Garret</formatting></line>
<line l="120" t="2367" r="2170" b="2416"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Barry of St Peter&apos;s Harbour while ploughing in his field struck some</formatting></line>
<line l="120" t="2418" r="2079" b="2466"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">object that gave a metallic .soun^ and which proved to be the bell</formatting></line>
<line l="118" t="2470" r="2143" b="2513"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">of the old church of St Pierre which had lain unharmed in the earth</formatting></line>
<line l="118" t="2520" r="2200" b="2572"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">for ome hundred fifteen years,  Mr Barry presented his treasure trove</formatting></line>
<line l="119" t="2570" r="2113" b="2619"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">to the parishioners of Morell who exchanged it for a new bell with</formatting></line>
<line l="118" t="2621" r="2141" b="2674"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the people of Rollo Bay,  The old relic was rapturously welcomed by</formatting></line>
<line l="117" t="2672" r="2042" b="2723"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">the descendants of its first owners and was trilled by kindness.</formatting></line>
<line l="113" t="2724" r="2199" b="2774"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Everybody wanted to ring it and everybody did ring it; in consequence</formatting></line>
<line l="115" t="2776" r="2077" b="2828"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">it was oroken and had to be  ecast.  In 1882 it was placed in the</formatting></line>
<line l="116" t="2825" r="2110" b="2884"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">tower of the old church and, when the present church was built, it</formatting></line>
<line l="112" t="2880" r="1988" b="2924"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">was placed in its tower there to call the faithful to Mass and</formatting></line>
<line l="114" t="2929" r="402" b="2977"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">devotions,</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
</page>
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<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="940" t="28" r="992" b="92"><region><rect l="940" t="28" r="992" b="92"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="947" t="32" r="975" b="87"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">I</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="150" t="150" r="1316" b="272"><region><rect l="150" t="150" r="1316" b="272"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="166" t="161" r="1315" b="220"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">■The bell has *he following Inscription!</formatting></line></par>
<par leftIndent="807">
<line l="973" t="222" r="1177" b="267"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">I  5 3</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1826" t="106" r="1906" b="164"><region><rect l="1826" t="106" r="1906" b="164"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="1845" t="129" r="1888" b="157"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">-.</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="134" t="302" r="2150" b="822"><region><rect l="134" t="302" r="2150" b="822"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="5" startIndent="627" lineSpacing="49">
<line l="791" t="316" r="1418" b="371"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Jesu + fene + Joseph</formatting></line>
<line l="164" t="362" r="2074" b="424"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">nP, Cosse n*a faite, Tdchelin, 1723.  + En 1870 J »al ete retiree</formatting></line>
<line l="158" t="417" r="1559" b="481"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">des ruir.es d&apos;un acien village Acadien, I. P. E.</formatting></line>
<line l="165" t="464" r="1984" b="528"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&apos;in  1882 les paroissiens de Hollo Bay m&apos;ont fait refrondre par</formatting></line>
<line l="155" t="518" r="2134" b="570"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">.leneely et cie de West Troy, jj, y   on SOuvenir de leurs Ancetres</formatting></line>
<line l="155" t="566" r="541" b="609"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">dc l&apos;Acadie.&quot;</formatting></line></par>
<par rightIndent="63" lineSpacing="48">
<line l="158" t="676" r="2071" b="727"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The Priests who have served in the parish of St Alexis since the</formatting></line>
<line l="153" t="725" r="1493" b="778"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">tine of Bishop Aeneas Bernard fecSachern arei</formatting></line>
<line l="150" t="777" r="1022" b="817"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Reverend Jean Louise Beaubien</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="388" t="866" r="1116" b="1730"><region><rect l="388" t="866" r="1116" b="1730"></rect></region>
<text>
<par lineSpacing="101">
<line l="421" t="876" r="1043" b="920"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Joseph Etienne Cecile</formatting></line>
<line l="416" t="975" r="897" b="1015"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Antoine Gosselin</formatting></line>
<line l="418" t="1078" r="1104" b="1120"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Williar: Bernard MacLeod</formatting></line>
<line l="416" t="1177" r="832" b="1216"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">John 1-ss.c Donald</formatting></line>
<line l="412" t="1280" r="708" b="1316"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">R. IficFhee</formatting></line>
<line l="410" t="1380" r="920" b="1420"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Francis MacDonald</formatting></line>
<line l="411" t="1484" r="887" b="1526"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Dugald IJacDonald</formatting></line>
<line l="409" t="1585" r="979" b="1625"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Donald P. MacDonald</formatting></line>
<line l="404" t="1687" r="793" b="1726"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Edward Walker</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1156" t="880" r="2056" b="1336"><region><rect l="1156" t="880" r="2056" b="1336"></rect></region>
<text>
<par leftIndent="267" startIndent="-267" lineSpacing="100">
<line l="1171" t="890" r="1981" b="932"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Reverend Reginald MacDonald</formatting></line>
<line l="1441" t="991" r="1891" b="1035"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Louis Callaghan</formatting></line>
<line l="1439" t="1090" r="2039" b="1133"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Alphcnsus L. Slnnott</formatting></line>
<line l="1439" t="1192" r="1824" b="1236"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">David McTague</formatting></line>
<line l="1438" t="1293" r="1913" b="1331"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Wilfred A. Keefe</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="144" t="1774" r="202" b="1852"><region><rect l="144" t="1774" r="202" b="1796"></rect><rect l="144" t="1796" r="188" b="1852"></rect></region>
<text>
<par>
<line l="0" t="0" r="0" b="0"></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="142" t="1776" r="2198" b="2090"><region><rect l="170" t="1776" r="2198" b="1826"></rect><rect l="160" t="1826" r="2198" b="1886"></rect><rect l="142" t="1886" r="2198" b="2090"></rect></region>
<text>
<par lineSpacing="50">
<line l="170" t="1777" r="2182" b="1839"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The Reverend Dr. Edward Walker was the first resident priest and he</formatting></line>
<line l="160" t="1829" r="2182" b="1890"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">built the present parochial house.  There is in this day no vestige</formatting></line>
<line l="159" t="1879" r="2152" b="1943"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">nor nark of the trials through which the pioneer settlers passedj°</formatting></line>
<line l="160" t="1930" r="2126" b="1991"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">their descendants live in peace and plenty, drawing harvests from</formatting></line>
<line l="156" t="1982" r="2124" b="2038"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">land and sea and adhering strictly to that faith for which their</formatting></line>
<line l="157" t="2032" r="1535" b="2085"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">forefathers suffered in the cruel days of old.</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="134" t="2166" r="2280" b="2396"><region><rect l="134" t="2166" r="2280" b="2396"></rect></region>
<text>
<par lineSpacing="49">
<line l="156" t="2180" r="2145" b="2248"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">The following were the first settlers of the mission of St Alexis,</formatting></line>
<line l="151" t="2232" r="2266" b="2299"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Hollo Bay,  Paul Fitres, Joseph Pitres, William Pitres, Joseph Bourke,</formatting></line>
<line l="154" t="2286" r="2111" b="2342"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">61son bourke, L&apos;Aumant Chaisson, Raphael Ghaisson, Jean Chaisson.</formatting></line>
<line l="151" t="2334" r="1567" b="2391"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Jean Longue epee, Jean D»Aigle, Charles D&apos;Aigle</formatting></line></par>
</text>
</block>
<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="124" t="2522" r="1708" b="2850"><region><rect l="124" t="2522" r="1708" b="2850"></rect></region>
<text>
<par lineSpacing="50">
<line l="151" t="2535" r="1693" b="2593"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">N« B,  This was copied from a history of the Church</formatting></line>
<line l="146" t="2587" r="1570" b="2646"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">written by Rev, A. E. Burke, D,D,,   in 1885, and</formatting></line>
<line l="146" t="2640" r="1597" b="2697"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">updated by the lat« Profess or Henri Blanchard, of</formatting></line>
<line l="145" t="2691" r="1504" b="2748"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Prince of Wales College, and published in the</formatting></line>
<line l="147" t="2743" r="1072" b="2798"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">Charlottetown Guardian in 1954,</formatting></line>
<line l="142" t="2793" r="982" b="2848"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">A few words have been added.</formatting></line></par>
</text>
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<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="852" t="2894" r="1210" b="2954"><region><rect l="852" t="2894" r="1210" b="2954"></rect></region>
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<par>
<line l="869" t="2907" r="1195" b="2950"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">A. M, D. G.</formatting></line></par>
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<text>
<par lineSpacing="68">
<line l="214" t="28" r="470" b="96"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">497008</formatting></line></par>
</text>
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<line l="2298" t="1" r="2311" b="12"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">•&apos;</formatting></line></par>
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<block blockType="Text" blockName="" l="1496" t="450" r="1792" b="608"><region><rect l="1496" t="450" r="1792" b="608"></rect></region>
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<par lineSpacing="80">
<line l="1496" t="462" r="1612" b="530"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">KM</formatting></line></par>
<par>
<line l="1496" t="552" r="1774" b="608"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">i LIBRARY</formatting></line></par>
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<text>
<par>
<line l="1266" t="2965" r="1402" b="2994"><formatting lang="EnglishUnitedStates">&apos;! -   &quot;   &apos;</formatting></line></par>
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