A rock wall of ages ago has now been fully uncovered at St. Margaret of Scotland Pioneer Cemetery.
The sandstone structure strings like a chain of rock pearls around the perimeter of this historic site in St. Margarets, which officially dates back to 1803 but goes even further back to the 1700s when the first Scottish settlers arrived.
A crew of four and a foreman has been working diligently for the past few weeks to uncover each of these sandstone nuggets, sometimes using tools as small as a trowel to excavate the stone wall details.
“I kind of felt like an archeologist,” says Margaret MacDonald of Souris, who is one of the workers on this 15-week project, which was funded by Skills P.E.I., the Island Community Fund and the St. Margaret’s Pioneer Cemetery Management Committee.
“It was really exciting when we started uncovering (each wall). Then we’d see the wall when it was all done it was, ‘Oh my god I love that one.’ And then we’d do another one and we’d love that one. Now I love that one the best,” she adds enthusiastically, pointing to the eastern wall with an old apple tree growing at its centre point.”
This project is part of an overall effort by the St. Margaret’s Pioneer Cemetery Management Committee’s to restore what is one of the oldest Catholic cemeteries on P.E.I.
The discovery of the wall happened by chance when committee members and sisters Anne Kells, Helen MacDonald and the late Pat Malone were poking about exploring the site three years ago.
“Pat found the wall,” says her husband Ray Malone.
“She opened it up and we started to pull the stuff away and then we realized there was a wall all around.’
“It was so overgrown that we didn’t know there was anything there. It was totally camouflaged. You couldn’t see anything but a mound of vegetation,” Kells adds.
“And we think it’s unique to P.E.I. This sort of system of stone surrounding cemeteries is traditional in Scotland. And of course these were early Scottish settlers so they would have used the same model.”
It was no easy task for the work crew to uncover this forgotten structural treasure.
They had to push through nearly two centuries of accumulated brush, grass and sediment build-up to find out where the dirt ended and the rock wall began.
“There were places where there were two or three feet of earth against it and brush and trees. There was a lot of debris.
“You couldn’t even see any of this (rock wall) at all,” says Lennie Rose, who is project foreman for this unique dig.
The workers did uncover bits of broken tombstones, which were collected and placed back in the cemetery itself.
“We found pieces of headstones right in along the wall as we were digging,” Rose says.
In his many years as a stone mason, Rose has had plenty of experience building things from the ground up, but never exposing things from the ground down to its basic rock core.
“I can’t say I’ve ever done anything like this before. I’d like to have it in my own backyard,” he says.


