Point with Rodk., Peter and Inocent Camp- bell as landowners there; Cummins 1925 Mair/and Point with Peter and Inn’t Camp- bell there. NTS 11 L/l 1967 Maitland Point.
Campbell Point: Extends into Boughton Bay, Lot 56. On Bayfield 1850. Named for Angus and Donald Campbell, the first settlers; both names are noted in Meacham 1880.
Campbell Point: Extends into Montague River, Lot 59. On Bayfield 1850. Meacham 1880 shows Duncan, Alex, Joseph and Danl. Campbell resident there, and Cum- mins 1925 has Alex S. and Hugh Campbell.
Campbells Cove: 10 mi NE of Souris in Lot 47. Named for Angus Campbell, resident there when the area was surveyed in 1808. PO 1896-1913. Campbells Point, adjacent to the cove, may have been the first part of PEI sighted by Jacques Cartier in 1534.
Campbells Creek: Flows E into Kildare River, Lot 4. Unnamed in Meacham 1880, but Benj. Campbell is shown nearby. Bayfield 1851 and Douglas 1925 Meggison Creek; Meacham 1880 shows Alex Meggison as a landowner at its mouth.
Campbells Point: Extends into Sevenmile Bay, Lot 26. Cummins 1925 identifies Mrs. Chas. and Roy Campbell there.
Campbells Pond: At Park Corner, Lot 21. Noted in JHA 1831. Meacham 1880 shows John Campbell there.
Campbells Pond: At Grand Tracadie in Lot 35. Meacham 1880 does not name it, but shows Hugh, Donald and Peter Campbell there. De la Roque 1752 Elang des Barges; Holland 1765 Elang de Berge; Wright and Cundall 1874 Etang du Berge.
Campbells Pond: See Ramsays Pond.
31
Campbellton: 7 mi NW of O’Leary in Lots 4 and 7. PO L014 1873—1914.
Campbellton: 8 mi W of North Rustico in Lot 21. Benjamin Chappell in his diary, 1777, notes Campbelton and also refers to Mr. Campbell. This is probably not Robert Campbell, who, with Robert Clark, bought Lot 21 in 1774, but more likely James Campbell, possibly Robert’s son, who is listed in Census of 1798. In postal records
listed as an alternative for New London 1860-1871.
Campbellton Island: See McEwens Point.
Camperdown Settlement: Noted in JHA 1859 in Lot 30.
Canada Settlement: Former name of the set- tlement between Tyne Valley and Northam, Lot 13. Noted as early as 1854. Canada Road is still used for the road between the same two communities.
Canadian Creek: Flows W into Foxley River, Lot 11. Noted in JHA 1840 as Canadian River. Origin unknown; possibly a French Canadian settled there.
Canavoy: 4 mi NE of Mount Stewart. Named for Canonbie, Dumfries, Scotland. JHA 1870 Conovoy Road; Meacham 1880 Canovey Rd. Canavoy Island is in Savage Harbour.
Canceaux Cove: Adjacent to West River at Rocky Point. Named for Samuel Holland’s vessel that brought his survey party from England. Holland stated that the Canceaux was “unrigged and lay’d up in a cove a mile distant from the fort (Amherst), where she is entirely out of danger from the ice doing her the least damage by driving upon her when it breaks up in the spring”. Bayfield 1846 Canseau Pt. In the French period the cove was anse aux Sauvages.