16 area for many years; he did not marry. A third son, Roderick William , married Hector MacLean 's daughter, Rachael (1826-1923) (see Laughlin MacLean History ). Roderick lived on the farm beside the Southwest School. Laughlin MacLean (across from the Lot 16 Hall) Another MacLean family, Laughlin MacLean (1738-1843), and his wife Catherine immigrated to PEI from The Isle of Mull, Scodand. They sailed on the ship Clarendon and landed in Charlottetown in 1808. The couple setded in Lot 16 on the on or near the property now owned by Dennis and Marcia Bright. The property became known as ' Fountain Head '. Laughlin and Catherine's son, Hector, was fifteen years old when the family arrived in Charlottetown , PEI . Hector, who was apprenticed to a tailor in the capital, remained in Charlottetown when the family moved to Lot 16 . He traveled by horseback when he came to visit. Laughlin and Catherine had only a small parcel of land, but eventually Hector moved to Lot 16 and enlarged the holding by purchasing more prop¬ erty adjacent to his father's land. Hector (1793-1883) married Agnes Sinclair (1794-1893) of Malpeque ; their daughter Rachael married Roderick Mac - Lean , (see Allan MacLean History ). This branch of the MacLean family lives on through the offspring of Rachael and Roderick. A second daughter, Jane, married John MacLaurin , and a son, Donald, married John's sister, Margaret (see MacLaren History). John and Jane farmed on the properly presendy owned by Glen Campbell . They had no children and their adopted son, Edmund Ramsay , inherited the prop¬ erty. Donald and Margaret lived on the farm that Charles Monkley later purchased. They had a daughter, Isabelle, who manned Robert Beairsto of Summerside . Their daughter, Carrie (see Carrie Beairsto ), of Miscouche attended Presbyterian Church. Roderick and Rachael's family now represented both the Allan and Laughlin MacLean branches of the MacLean fami¬ lies. They had three sons and a daughter who had Lot 16 con¬ nections. William James , Alexander Roderick , Alfred Edgar 280 United Church and Its People