Charles Full 50 acres
Jno. Bryenton 22 acres Jno. Dixon 48 acres Jno. Pickett 12 acres J. McWilliams 34‘/2 acres Robert Prowse 70 acres Jno. Prowse 70 acres Cemetery 60 acres East Side of the Road: Jno. McGougan 100 acres Joseph B. Stewart 130 acres Peter Martin 100 acres Peter Robertson 100 acres Alex Martin 100 acres Jno. McGregor 100 acres Alex Scott 50 acres Jno. Clements 150 acres Donald McMillan 99 acres George Bennett 1 acre Jno. McMillan 100 acres Charles Cox 7] acres Wm. Pierce 75 acres Wm. Bryenton 50 acres Jno. McMillan 100 acres George Jackson 35 acres Wm. Bryenton 75 acres Jno. Burrows 75 acres Sam Roper 50 acres George Henderson 60 acres Issac Henderson 62 acres
These early settlers and their numerous descendants were alone responsible for the growth of Brackley into a small but prosperous com- munity. Many of these settlers, aside from being well-known locally were hailed across the Island as excellent farmers. In a book entitled, ”Past and Present at P.E.|.”, the authors, D.A. MacKinnon and AB. Warburton, have recognized the significance of these early settlers by furnishing the modern historian with biographies of the more prominent men in Brackley around the turn of the 20th century.
George Bryenton - He was born on December 25, 1837. He lived on 50 acres of land in Brackley. He donated land for the Brackley United
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