- 18 - At the time of hi3 being chosen Bishop of Charlottetown, F &taer Kclntyre was mission priest at Tignish . Inmediately upon his consecration he removed to the capital, and he rented the old homestead of the Reddin family waich stood upon the side now occupied by the Episcopal Felace and which he made his home. The Rev. Thomas Phelan was transferred to Tracadie end the late Very Rev. Dr . t-c Donald appointed Vicar General and priest in charge of Charlottetown . After the removal of Father Phelan to Tracadie , the house which he had so long occupied and which had been built by the zealous Father Fitzgerald was sold to one James ivclnnis and hauled to where, added to and rejuvenated, it still stands, the dwelling house and business establishment of Mrs. Cffer . In 1862 the Bishop purchased the house of Kr. Joseph ^&cDonald on and removed to it in the summer of that year. In I863 College, originally a wooden building, was encased in brick. To assist in defraying the expense of tnis undertaking the sisters of the Congregation of Kotre Dame held a bazaar in the college, the first Catholic bazaar ever held in the diocese. It was very successful, £550 bein^, realized. I864 was marked by a brave achievement which deserves a place of honour in the annals of trie diocese. At that time, more then twenty years ago, when Charlottetown was not, as it is to-day, bristling with schools, and when its educational establishments were exclusively Protestant, with the exception of the one Convent Boarding School on , there was felt to be great need of a day school at the west end of the town. Toe old convent of Kotre Dame} now St. Anne's School.was crowded to its capacity, and the teachers' strength overtaxed in attending to the numbers of children who flocked to their classes; yet all these children came from homes in the east end of the city; those of the west end were unprovided for. The Bishop, ever zealous for the welfare of the little ones of his flock, took this matter into consideration, ^-nd endeavored to procure a house in a convenient neighbourhood, wnere the nuns could open a school. The choice was