: At North Wiltshire , Lot 31. John Balderston (cl 803-1876), who came to PEI from England in 1822, is said to have built the first windmill at Belfast , Lot 58. His son Benjamin became a miller at North Wiltshire 1857. : 7 mi NW of Montague in Lot 51. Named for Thomas Baldwin , farmer and merchant who died about 1875. PO Baldwin's Road 1882. Settled by Irish 1839 and 1841. Baldwin's: See St. Teresa . : In , Lot 10 . Named for Fred Ballem , who is noted in Cummins 1925 as the owner of adjacent lots. Formerly called . Also known as . Baltic : 6 mi N of Kensington in Lot 18 and Royalty. Douglas 1925 sug¬ gests it may date from Napoleonic Wars when there was a heavy timber export trade from the Maritimes owing to the Baltic ports being closed to British com¬ merce. Possibly it, and other places called Baltic in PEI and Ontario , are derived from the Gaelic bailteach, "belonging to a village". PO 1891 -1923. Baltic River flows N into Darnley Basin . Baltic : 7 mi NE of Souris in Lot 46. School established cl846, later becoming East Baltic when West Baltic school area set up 2 mi W in Glencorradale . PO East Baltic 1877-1970. Settled 1842. Formerly called Irish Baltic . Baltic : See Bethel . Baltic : See . : In Meacham 1 880 for short road leading N W from Clyde River . Bangor : 4 mi S of Morell in Lots 39 and 40. Selected at a public meeting cl 879 from an old English dictionary; possibly named for Bangor , Carnarvon, Wales , or Bangor , Northern Ireland . PO 1884-1913. For¬ merly known as Indian for road leading from Morell to Indian Reserve. Banks Point : Former name of the point at Annandale . On Bayfield 1850. Meacham 1880 shows Wm. Banks resident there. Bannockburn: Name used in 1838 in Lot 31. The road from Clyde River to Hampshire is called . Baptiste Creek : Flows SE into in Lots 9 and 10. Named for an early settler who cut hay there. Survey plan 1835 ; Meacham 1880 Baptiste Creek . Baptiste Point : See Grande Digue Point . Barbara Weit : Former school district in Lower New Annan , Lot 19, 3 mi W of Kensington . Barbara Weit Riven Flows W into . Douglas 1925 quotes H. G. Compton that it was named for the wife of George Waite who settled near it 1804. Douglas also suggests it may relate to barberry weed the common shrub with red berries. The earliest reference with the present spelling is the PEI Register 1 830. Other references have Barbara Weed , Barbara Wiot , Bar¬ bara Wiet and Barbary Wyet . Since George Waite lived until the mid-1800s it would seem that Barbara Waite would have oc¬ curred in a reference to the river. Perhaps the name is corrupted from the original Micmac name for it. In Micmac Kadakun- cheech, "little eel trap". : Former name of a pond in Ellerslie where James Barclay had mills in the late 1800s. Noted by Meacham 1880. Also called . Barges, Etangdes: See . 19