A meeting of the Session of the Montrose Charge took place on April 5, 1915. The matter of the church building in Miminegash was considered, and it was agreed that the Moderator cooperated with the Presbytery Committee regarding the disposal of the church building. There being some ten families in that section nor- mally Presbyterian, it was agreed that the Rev. Emmanuel Lockhart should visit them and the Rev. George Millar, Chairman of the Presbytery Committee in order to discover the attitude of the people regarding the church building and other matters concerning that section. The Rev. George Millar reported to the P.E.I. Presbytery in Miminegash and stated that the Rev. Emmanuel Lockhart had visited the locality and saw some prospect of coming to a settlement with regard to the building. On a motion which was voted and approved, the Committee on Church Property was continued and the Rev. Emmanuel Lockhart was added to it. The final report on the Miminegash property was given by the Rev. George Millar to the RBI Presbytery in Charlottetown on May 6, 1916. Rev. Millar stated that the Miminegash Presbyterian Church building had been sold to Innis Trail Reid of Miminegash for the sum of $50.00. Mr. Reid moved the building to Miminegash Run where it was used in Mr. Reid’s business enterprises. On motion of the Presbytery, the Committee on Church Property was thanked for their services and discharged. The Clerk of the Presbytery was in- structed to forward the proceeds of the sale to the Augmentation Committee. The Presbyterian congregation in Miminegash had declined in numbers through death or movement away from Prince Edward Island to such an extent that the remaining membership could no longer support a church. 8. INNIS TRAIL REID “Innis Trail Reid was an efficient and capable Collector of Customs who resided at Ebbsfleet, Prince County. He was born in New London, Prince Edward Island on October 28, 1855 and was the son of James T. Reid, a native of Scotland, where he was born on January 4, 1817. The paternal grandfather, Trail Reid, was also born in Scotland and came to Prince Edward Island in an early day, being numbered among the first school teachers on the Island, which pursuit he followed three years, his death occurring in New London. James T. Reid followed farming and in connection therewith worked some at masonry. He lived in New London until 1865, when the family removed to Miminegash, where he died in 1883. He was the father of the following children: Thomas, who died in 1902; Isabella, who died in 1851; Mary, who died in 1892; Innis, subject of this sketch; Sinclair died in 1883; Douglas was a blacksmith and lived in Camp— bellton; Ann lived in Boston, Massachusetts; Jemina lived in Fredericton, and Ellen lived in North Dakota. James T. Reid was a Liberal in politics and in religion, formerly a Bible Christian and later, a Presbyterian. Innis Trail Reid received his education in the district schools of the neighbourhood and was reared to the life of a farmer, to which line of enterprise 232