GEOGRAPHIC BOARD OF CANADA 23 Dundee ; settlement, lot 39. After Dundee , Scotland . Rev. D. M. Lamont , Charlottetown , writes: "A young lady in Dundee , Scotland , having been betrothed to a sea captain, agreed to follow him to America, and according to arrangement landed in Charlottetown about 1840. Her lover who, according to plan, was to sail to Charlottetown to welcome her arrival never appeared. The lone Scotch lassie then watched long and tearfully out over the Hillsborough water, but the captain and his ship were never heard of, having probably perished in a storm. When the luckless bride abandoned all hope of her lover, other applicants for the vacated place in her affections began to surround her; and at length she chose from among them John Martin, a farmer living in the rear of Orwell. It is a tribute to the esteem in which she was held and perhaps the romance of her life that this district was after her called Dundee ." Angus Martin writes that his mother's name was Mary Kittle and that she left Dundee , Scotland , June 4, 1.842, and landed at Charlottetown in September. Mr. Martin adds that her mother sent her out against her will to marry a farmer. She did not like him and did not marry him. She died in 1918, aged 94. Dunedin ; settlement, lot 65. An early name of Edinburgh, Scotland . Dunk; river, Bedeque bay, lots 25 and 26. Holland, 1765. Refer to Sunbury . Dunstaffnage ; settlement, lot 35. After Dunstaffnage castle, Argyllshire, Scotland . Named by Argyllshire settlers. Meacham , 1880. Durell ; point, lot 56. Holland, 1765. After Philip Durell , second in command under Admiral Saunders before Quebec . Philip Durell received his commission as captain in the Royal Navy , February 8, 1742. In 1743 he commanded the Eltham , of 40 guns, in the attack on Cavallo, Venezuela; in 1744 he served on the Home station and in the Leeward islands, and in April, 1745, was sent to as captain of H.M . ship Superbe. In this year he published in London "A Particular Account of the Taking of ." In 1747 he commanded successively the Chester and the Gloucester, each of 50 guns. In 1755 he had charge of the Terrible, 74 guns, and in 1756 commanded the Trident, 64 guns, in Byng 's unlucky expedition to Minorca. Early in 1758 he was sent to Halifax in the Princess Amelia , 80 guns. On the reduction of this year he was promoted to be rear admiral of the Blue, and in February, 1759, he became rear admiral of the Red. Preparatory to the expedition against Quebec, he instituted a blockade of the St. Lawrence in the spring of 1759, but not soon enough to prevent some French ships arriving in Canada . In 1762 he became vice admiral of the Blue and in 1766 succeeded Lord Colville in command of the station at Halifax . He died shortly after his arrival and was buried in St . Paul's church, Halifax . Duvar ; settlement, lot 5. After Col. J. Hunter Duvar , an Island poet. He wrote "Esmeralda" and "Roberval" lengthy poems of considerable merit. Dutchman; rock, lot 15. Dutchman is a favourite name of naval surveyors, Mundoopskoochk meaning "devil's little rock," is the Micmac name. Earnscliffe ; settlement, lot 50. After Earnscliffe , Ottawa, the residence of Sir John A. Mac - donald during the later years of his life. Adopted as a post office name instead of Gallas Point, April 1, 1897. Earnscliffe , Ottawa, is situated on the bluffs along the Ottawa river below the canal, and was built by John McKinnon . _ Later it was owned by Thomas Reynolds , from whom Sir John Macdonald purchased it. East: point and lake, southwest of the point, lot 47. Also East Point settlement. Holland, 1765. The point is the eastern extremity of the island. The lake is South lake of Meacnam, 1880, which applies the name East to the lake east of Surveyor point. Kespemenegek, meaning "the end of an island," is the Micmac Indian name. Compare Gaspe cape, Quebec . East lake is havre de l'Eshourie of de la Roque, 1752 and havre de l'Es30ussier (.' Eenouerie) of Pichon, 1760. East; parish, Kings county. Holland, 1765. Ebbsfleet ; settlement with post office, lot 2. After Ebbsfleet , hamlet. Kent, England . Ebbs- fleet post office was opened July 1, 1894. Ebenezer; settlement, lot 24. Meacham , 1880. Doubtless biblical. Edward; creek, Eliot river, lot 31. Holland, 1765. Edward river on chart, 1846 ?efe£*° Eliot. Meacham , 1880, has Clyde river, after Clyde river, Lake, 1863, has Dog river, Known as Dog river, 1826, and as New Clyde river, 1864. The Micmac Indian name is Oonigunsuk, meaning "portage." Eel • creek lot 20 Eglinton;'cove, lot 43. Holland, 1765. Possibly after' Alexander Montgomery ; 10th Earl o Eglinton, born 1723, killed by a poacher in 1769. One of the lords of the bedchamber to George III . A representative Scottish peer, 1761 and 1768 Eglinton was granted 20,000 acres in West Florida in 1764. Eglington on Wright and Cundall , 18/4. Eglinton; point, lot 43. See Abell . Egmont ; bay, southwest coast of the island; cape, lot 15, parish, Prince county. Holland, 1765 on which a secondary name is the French one bay e de la Gran de Anca A fer Jo hn Perceval (1710 or 1711-70), 2nd Earl of Egmont m the peerage of Ireland mad a peer ot Great Britain in 1762 with the title of Baron Lovel and Holland of Enmore , Somerset, tost