Chapter One IN THE BEGINNING — THE MICMACS The first inhabitants of Prince Edward Island were transient bands Jof Micmac Indians from the mainland. Wintering in Nova Scotia and New Brunswick where game was more plentiful, they migrated to the Island, {which they called Abegweit, each summer for a season of hunting and fishing. (As they paddled up the Hillsborough , the Micmacs were evidently attracted to a bank of brilliant red clay which stood in marked contrast to the miles of green marsh grass on either side. Now practically obliter¬ ated by erosion, Red Bank, located on the farm presently owned by Bruce Pigot , was the favourite Indian camping ground in the Mount Stewart area. There, during the 1870's, as many as fifteen wigwams were located. Ridges marking the locations of the kitchen "middens" or garbage heaps could be seen until 1969, when bulldozing operations connected with the instal¬ lation of the village sewer system erased that potentially fruitful field