Pictures and Information - contact, though few, were a favourite of the city people and of course the beach was a haven for the Saturday night parties. It was a treat for me to move from Sandy Cove to Horseshoe Bay because, for the first time, there was a boy of my age to play with. Doug Rogers whose Dad owned and operated the boat rental located in the centre of the Bay between the hotel and dancehali. However, Horseshoe Bay is a different story altogether. Notwithstanding, enclosed is a picture of our store which became a service station Is now a retail/condo complex. Residents Reminisce This article appeared in the Cauifeiid Chronicle the Summer of 1981. .... An note from "Greyrocks" .... Gill Roberts A few years ago an elderly gentleman stopped at our gate and told me that his brother had been born in our house, "Greyrocks", in the early 1900's. He then added, in a voice which betrayed amazement that the house was still standing, "You know, it was an old house then!". Just how old we have never quite been able to discover. We do know, however, that the original structure was a small rose-covered cottage built on the edge of the footpath which later became Pilot House Road, and somewhat to the east of the location of the present house. Research has also uncovered the fact that the house was built for Mrs. Cauifeiid, who with her daughter came to join the Admiral around 1899. Whether she actually lived in the house is not entirely certain, though when we bought Page Four Cont'd. next column. Residents Reminisce - cont'd. In 1962, the owners left with us a small wooden "what not", which hangs in our front hall and which they insisted must stay with the house. It had apparently belonged to Mrs. Cauifeiid and had been in the house since her day. Certainly her stay at "Greyrocks", which is the original name of the house at 4765 Pilot House Road, can at best have been brief as it was sold by her in 1902, for about $250.00 to the Grafton brothers, Walter and Thomas, who both worked at the Pilot Station on Kettle Point. In true Cauifeiid fashion, this transaction involved a certain amount of confusion. The prospective purchaser was in fact Thomas Grafton, the father of the gentleman who stopped at the gate so many years later. Tom Grafton, however, owned a cow which had been misguided enough to trample and devour Mrs. Caulfeild's garden one day, causing an irreparable breach between the owner of the cow and the owner of the garden! Thus the transactions had to be carried on between Mrs. Cauifeiid and Walter Grafton, rather than his brother. Subsequent owners of the cottage at road level were the Harrison family, Mr. Harrison being the postmaster at Caulfeilds Landing as it was then called. Whether they were responsible for relocating the house in its present situation has never come to light. However, by 1928, the rose-covered cottage had magically risen in the world and had become a somewhat larger house on its present rocky site. In that year, Walter Adair purchased the property and his amily continued ti live in the house until 1962, adding on first one upstairs gable and then In 1932 a second, thus totally transforming the one-time cottage into a full-scale residence. We discovered, however, during the course of further alterations, that the preferred method of construction was simply wall in the outside siding and tack another room on the outside. We also discovered that, Cont'd. on page Five.