On CHAPTER XII. MURRAY HARBOR. lies between and Three . The harbor is well sheltered, but its entrance is intricate, and for large vessels is some¬ what obstructed by a sand bar. In the early history of this place shipbuilding and lumbering were car¬ ried on with a good deal of energy. In the year 1806 the late Lemuel Cambridge , Esq., built a large establishment of mills, and commenced a trade in lumber which gave employment to a large number of men, many of whom afterwards took up land and became steady and prosperous farmers. Mr. Cambridge also at the same time commenced a fish¬ ing establishment at . At that period there were only three actual settlers. The hands employed in the lumbering and fishing busi¬ ness were some of them from the Island of Guern¬ sey, others from Scotland , and some belonged to different parts of the island. As in almost every part of the island, so in this, the first Presbyterian minister who visited it was Rev. James McGregor , in the year 1806. In that year he preached in the house of Mr. James Irving , a Dumfriesshire Presbyterian; on the same occa¬ sion he preached also in the house of Mr. William Graham . The immigrants from Guernsey were mostly Episcopalians, slightly tinged with Armeni- 9 i