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Home CEMETERY HISTORY 1973 Restoration

Pre-Restoration Video (October 2008)

To view a video created by Waldron Leard, click on the following link to be taken to his Flickr website:

PRE-RESTORATION VIDEO

As you watch this video, compare it with what you have seen in our restoration photos and you will be amazed at how far this restoration has progressed.  Can you see the ocean at all?  Now you can, but a few years ago, this cemetery was hidden in the wild brush.

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1970 LETTER TO HONOURABLE ALEX B. CAMPBELL

Alistair Mac Isaac, of Chevy Chase, Maryland, can be credited with initiating the earliest recorded effort to restore the cemetery, as he made a plea to the Premier of Prince Edward Island, the Honourable Alex Campbell.

17 August 1970

Honourable Alex B. Campbell
Premier’s Office, Legislative Building
Charlottetown, PEI
Canada


Dear Premier:

During a recent visit to your beautiful island, I accidently stumbled upon an old graveyard whose stones have been removed and thrown over the diked walls where shrubs have shrouded them from all to see. Inquiries reveal that this graveyard, which bears the remains of the first Scottish settlers, is allegedly the oldest in King’s County. In my view, it should be refurbished and the stones replaced, as it has great historical significance not only to the Island but to all of Canada.

This graveyard is located near the shore approximately one half mile north of St. Margaret’s in King’s County. Further, I understand that the first or original church was across the road from the graveyard. If this is so, a suitable historical marker should be erected.

Islanders have told me that you have a Provincial Ordinance stating that all graveyards must be maintained. By some oversight, this small burial ground was overlooked in the implementation of the law.

I sincerely hope, Sir, that irrespective of cost, steps can be taken immediately, to preserve this historical plot before further damage results to the old and, in some cases, hand hewn stones.

I would appreciate knowing, what if anything your office can do to preserve and restore this monument.

Yours very truly,

A.G.M Mac Isaac
Major

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1973-74 Restoration and Re-dedication

The restoration began during the later part of 1973. The condition of the Cemetery was such that one would wonder if it could ever be restored, five head stones were left standing on ploughed land with undergrowth of tall  grass and thorny bushes.  An earthen and stone dyke about three feet high enclosed the cemetery. Upon examination of the dyke head stones were found lying just outside of it apparently been pushed or placed there for a purpose which never came about, many were broken and pieces scattered about.A road grader and a turndozer were used to clear and level the. grounds in preparation for raking and seeding. The headstones were then brought back into the cemetery, many broken which meant sorting the pieces and placing them together for repairing and erecting. You'll see today that there are 132 headstones all repaired and standing the results of the work carried out under the supervision of Mr. Patrick Lundrigan.

St Margaret's Pioneer Cemetery Rededication Service

Sunday October 13,1974

TRIBUTE TO OUR ANCESTORS, given by Hughie Joseph MacDonald

Sing, Sing a Song of Joy! These are the sentiments which are in our hearts this afternoon, we are joyous because our hearts are laden with thanks. On this our thanksgiving weekend as we gather to honour the faith and courage of our forebears, thanksgiving. Many of us have accepted the faith, which we enjoy as a right, but still we fail to realize that our ancestors kept theirs under conditions which would destroy ours, we have only to read the story of the late Bishop Bernard MacEachern, who travelled the length and breadth of P.E.I. by boat and by foot, often on snowshoes to gather the flock together in some remote farmhouse, to celebrate the mysteries of our early religion.

It might be well for us today to give thanks for our faith which has come to us only through adverse conditions and a marvelous relationship between our forebears and our God, in whom they place their trust.  You and I are, at present, enjoying the good life. We have all types of conveniences at our disposal. In a word, the world is at our fingertips. At the click of a switch we can learn everything that happens in the world.  Our ancestors left their homeland with little more than a trunk and courage and faith which staggers the imagination, to brave a land which was to all practical purposes was hostile to mankind. They placed their faith and trust in God, and set off to make a new life for themselves, relying on their ambition and strength to clear away the forest so that we their children might be able to enjoy what we now have.  So as we gather to celebrate thanksgiving, it might be well to pause and give thanks to Almighty God for the courage of our forebears and pray for the grace to be strong enough to imitate the unsung heroism.

REMARKS AND UNVEILING OF PLAQUE, given by Honorable Bruce Stewart

Honorable Bruce Stewart, MLAThank you, Father Gillis and Father Brazil, Ladies and Gentlemen. It's cold here and I'm certainly not going to keep you very long, there are just one or two thoughts I'd like to leave with you.   One is, regarding the restoration of your cemetery here. This cemetery was restored largely through the efforts of one driving force In the Department of Health there is a Division of Vital Statistics, and at the head of that Vital Statistics, there is a man by the name of John McAleer and John McAleer is a man who is interested in the Heritage because John feels that if fuere wasn't a past, there certainly will be no future for us.

As you heard Father Gillis say that on this thanksgiving afternoon, it was a time to give thanks for those who lie in wait in this cemetery, dating back from the time it opened in the year 1805 and going on to the year 1895, for 90 years. The original settlers, from this area, from St.Margaret's Parish were buried in this Cemetery until a new location was selected some time later.

In the late 1790's when the McEacherns and the McCormicks and Hughie Joseph's forefathers and so forth, came to this part of the country, they were interested in establishing a church here, as Father Gillis said.  And in the year 1805, your priest of the day wrote to the Bishop in Quebec as related in the history book by Rev. John a. MacMillan and he asked if there could be established a church in this area and in the year approximately 1805 at Naufrage, permission was granted to the priest to open a church in Naufrage and it was built there 34' long and 24'wide. Sometime later in the year 1816 another church was built, right over here, and that church was somewhat larger as history book says with an 18' post.

It was from these starts that St. Margaret's had it's beginning on contacting the Bishop in Quebec, he said, it is necessary here in the year of 1805 to open a cemetery and the word came back was "Your cemetery can be opened, provided two things take place. One is your cemetery be fenced and that the other was that Father, it be blessed.  This cemetery was both, fenced and blessed, however, it fell into a state of disrepair. Three years or four years ago, there were three headstones left standing outside here and the rest of the 132 headstones that you see put back together by this man over here, Pat Lundrigan, they were lying in a state of disrepair. Now you can see what has happened, 132 of them in honour of Pat McCormack's great-great-grandfather and so forth,who is resting here and the others.

Ladies and Gentlemen, it is with pride then, that our Department of Health has played and had some hand in helping you to restore it, because I know from my travels here over the last 29 years that you have in St. Margaret's and Naufrage and Big Pond and so forth, a great heritage, one that you are very proud of.

Father Gillis told me that I could only speak for two minutes. I'd love to have about two hours ( ha ha ), but ladies and gentlemen this morning when I got up and the fire was out and the electricity was off at home, I was reminded that in 1770, the fire was out in St. Margaret's too because according to that history by Rev. John C. MacMillan, he said that in the year of 1770 the way you made your fire then was by a flintstone and a tinder, but the weather was so good that all the fires went out and they couldn't find the flintstone, so they petitioned six girls who walked all the way to Cable Head and came back with live coals, probably the first real possession of that type ever to be held on P.E.I.  But Ladies and Gentlemen, it is now a rededication day, we are proud to have taken a small part in it and I am sure that as we unveil this, it will be to the pride of your forefathers and may they rest in peace.

Rev. Lee Gillis

The Hon. Bruce Stewart said something that meant a lot to me, don't know if it means much to you, but the requirements of a cemetery has to be fenced and had to be blessed. This ground has been blessed before and we don't need to bless it again, but you and I by the same token have all been baptized so we are going to sprinkle some holy water on the graveyard to remind us that the water we are sprinkling is water which has been used as a sign of baptism, a sign of life, for us as christians and we are going to ask Father Wendall to do this.

My dearest brothers and sisters, you are reminded that coffee will be available at the hall and in the hope of the resurrection, let us leave now our brothers and sisters to rest in peace, and the Almighty God bless us, the Father, the Son and Holy Spirit.

 

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