to have been a church. There is, however, nothing in existing records which indicates that a place of worship was located in that area.
The Patriot of June 4, 1881 tells how two children of James Far- quharson of Savage Harbour found an old dagger, the wooden hilt of which had rotted away, while the blade had been almost consumed with rust. The weapon was supposed to have belonged to the French. In the Examiner for December 29, 1911, Mr. J. Bambrick of Glenroy relates how Joseph MacDonald of Mount Stewart drew in a stone pot While fishing oysters. Circular on the outside and hexagonal within, the relic aroused much interest at the time. Large silver coins used by the French, so thin that they could be doubled up with the fingers, were unearthed from time to time. As late as March 4, 1925, the Guardian reported that a coin bearing the date 1726 had been found by Mr. D. F. Egan of Mount Ste- wart While he was ploughing in one of his fields. These few fragments constituted the ghostly remains of a way of life which had truly “gone with the wind.”