1862. Elizabeth, relict of John McKay , 87, died the same year. She came from Sutherlandshire in 1822. Dr. Wiggins died when on a visit to St. Eleanors in 1865. Mrs. Thomas Burrows , 78, who came from Cornwall in 1837, died at New London in 1863. Mrs. James Power , 79, from County Tipperary in 1818, died in Irishtown in 1867. Thomas Adams , 87, a native of Derbyshire, for 83 years a resident of New London , died March 23, 1855. He must have been an infant passenger on the Elizabeth on its first voyage in 1773. Governor Dundas visited the community in 1864 and received a loyal address signed by the following inhabitants of New London : Pidgeon, McKie, Montgomery, Anderson, McLeod, Crosby, Sims. The John Cambridge Sims property was fully described and offered for sale in The Islander, February 7, 1862. Part of this property is in Sims hands today. Occasional items of news relating to other churches in the vicinity occur in the papers. A bazaar was held in 1862 in aid of Margate Wesleyan Church. In 1864 the Reverend A. Cameron was conducting marriages in New London . A Roman Catholic Chapel, erected in 1828, stood at Park Corner for about forty years. A few burials were made in a cemetery adjacent to it and occasional serv¬ ices were held in it by travelling priests. Indeed, tradition tells that a Chapel stood on in the later years of the French regime, and that the first owner of the hill, John McKenzie , found some relics of its furnishings which he gave to Chapel. No reliable record of the existence of this chapel has been dis¬ covered. One of the few authentic relics of He St . Jean hangs voice¬ less in the belfry of the United Church in Malpeque , the old, cracked, crudely-cast church bell which once belonged to the Aca¬ dian Chapel at Low Point , Lot 14. It bears the following text in raised letters from Matthew XI , 11, and given here verbatim et literatim: INTER NATOS MULLIERUM NON JOANNES BAB- TISTA SUREXIT MAJOR . 36