
St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church in Ottawa
'St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church' is the oldest
Presbyterian church in
Ottawa,
Canada.
History
Creation
It is Ottawa's oldest
Presbyterian Church in Canada congregation with the original church opening in
1828. The church was founded for, and built by, the Scottish and Irish labourers who were constructing the
Rideau Canal for Montreal's
John Redpath and their own
Thomas MacKay. The location on
Wellington Street was purchased from
Nicholas Sparks for 200 Pounds Sterling and the church was built during lulls in the construction of the canal.
As Ottawa had no
Anglican church at the time, St. Andrew's argued that it should be considered the
established church in the city, as the representative of the Established
Church of Scotland. The advantage of being so recognized, was the rights to
clergy reserves. The authorities agreed to the request, and in
1837 the church was granted a large
glebe to the south of the city. This area stretching from
Bronson Avenue to the Rideau Canal later became the neighbourhood known as
the Glebe. In
1844, a number of families left following the
1843 Disruption within the Church of Scotland, and formed
Knox Free Church. Despite those losses, the original building still proved too small, an extension was completed in
1854, and the building was then replaced with the current structure in
1872.
Growth
In June
1875, St. Andrew's,
Knox, Bank Street (later
Chalmers ), and the newly formed congregations in
New Edinburgh (now
MacKay United Church, named after their first Elder and Trustee
Thomas MacKay) , and in the
Sandy Hill(or
Lower Town)
St. Paul's or Daly Street, as well as congregations in nearby Rochesterville (Erskine),
Hull, Quebec,
Cumberland, Manotick,
Nepean (Merivale, and Bell's Corners), that all became part of the
Presbyterian Church in Canada, within the ''Presbytery of Ottawa''.
In
1925, this congregation voted 389-309 to remain in the
Presbyterian Church in Canada rather than join the
United Church of Canada. A number of families, and the Minister, went to nearby
Chalmers; only
Knox and Erskine (scheduled to close later in 2007), within the then City of Ottawa remained as "continuing" Presbyterians.
After 1925, the
Presbyterian presence in Ottawa was far smaller. St Andrew's (as well as Knox and Erskine) were involved with city-wide ministries. A Church School in the
Hintonburg neighbourhood (the former Bethany Presbyterian Church became Parkdale United), eventually became St. Stephen's Church in 1945, while "minority" groups formed
St. Giles in
The Glebe, Westminster in
Westboro, South
Gloucester and Knox Church,
Manotick.
Following the
1950 annexation by Ottawa of parts of
Nepean and
Gloucester Townships, St. Andrew's was very supportive of Presbyterian church extension into these new residential neighbourhoods. Under the leadership of Rev. Dr. John A. Johnston, father of the present Senior Minister, four new congregations were started after his appointment in
1956; St Timothy's on
Alta Vista Drive, a new St. Paul's, located on
Woodroffe Avenue, St. Martin's in
Manor Park, and St. David's in
Overbrook. The latter two merged in
1967, and later extension projects included Parkwood, in
Nepean, Trinity in
Kanata, Grace in
Orleans, and Greenview (closed June 30 2007) in
Barrhaven.
Recent history
With the changing demographics in Ottawa, there were other changes in the area adjacent to the congregation. In the
1970s, it was decided to lease the land to the rear of the church. The
Sunday school building that had been built in
1874 was torn down and an office building, St. Andrew's Tower, was built in its place in
1988. This building, which is attached directly to the rear of the church, is now the headquarters of the
Department of Justice, although the congregation has offices, and rooms on the lower levels, entered from
Kent Street, with wheelchair access from the Tower Building.
A number of dignitaries have attended the church. It was where
Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King worshipped when in Ottawa.
Governor Generals included the
Earl of Aberdeen, and
Lord Tweedsmuir, also known as author
John Buchan, whose February
1940 funeral was held within the sanctuary.
Princess Margriet of the Netherlands was baptized here, while the
royal family was in exile during the
Second World War, and a Lectern was later donated by the family, featuring the Dutch Royal Coat of Arms.
In September
2003, the congregation celebrated their 175th Anniversary. A new history book, ''Unto the Hills Around'' by John S. Moir, was published for this milestone occasion.
This book was awarded the T. Melville Bailey Memorial Award by the Presbyterian Church in Canada's Committee on History in June 2005.
Ministers
The current Senior Minister of St. Andrew's is the Reverend Andrew Johnston, whose childhood was spent in Ottawa,
Lagos Nigeria, and
Hamilton, Ontario. He came in January
1999 from the Briarwood Presbyterian Church,
Beaconsfield, Quebec, on the
West Island of
Montreal.
Since 1828, thirteen Ministers have served this congregation along with a number of associates, assistants, deaconesses, pastoral care, and student ministers.
All but six of these senior ministers were born in
Scotland, the last being Rev. Dr. A. Ian Burnett, who resigned in
1960.
Two ministers; Rev. Dr. William T. Herridge (1914), and Minister Emeritus Rev. Dr. Arthur W. Currie (
1981), both held the Office of
Moderator of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in Canada while serving as Minister of St. Andrew's. Rev. Dr. Daniel Miner Gordon (
1896) was moderator after his tenure (1867-1882) in Ottawa, and before he became Principal of
Queen's University. The
General Assembly moderated by Dr. Currie was also held in Ottawa, in
Knox, and at Tabaret Hall in the
University of Ottawa.
St Andrew's has hosted the Presbyterian General Assembly in
1879 1901,
1910,
1929,
1951, and
1997, and before
1875, the Church of Scotland Synod in
1859 and
1874.
List of Ministers
★ John Cruickshank (1829-1843),
★ Alexander MacKid (1844-1846),
★ William Durie + (1846-1847),
★ Alexander Spence (1848-1867),
★ Daniel Miner Gordon (1867-1882),
★ William T. Herridge (1883-1919),
★ G.G.D. Kirkpatrck (1920-1925),
★ William Harvey Leathem + (1926-1937),
★ Alexander Ferguson + (1938-1942),
★ Andrew Ian Burnett (1943-1960),
★ Arthur W. Currie (1961-1986),
★ James Peter Jones (1987-1997),
★ 'Andrew J. R. Johnston' (January 31 1999-).
Associates;
★ Arthur M. Pattison (1973-197x),
★ Willard Pottinger (197x-1985),
★ Brian Weatherdon (198x-1994),
★ 'Gregory Davidson' (June 19, 2005-)
+ Died In Pastorate.
External links
★
Official site
★
The church's organ