Showing 470 results

Names
United Church of Canada√

Dean, Ken

  • IHM027
  • Person
  • 19?–

Indian Head Pastoral Charge

  • SCAA-UCCS-0460
  • Corporate body
  • 1925–

Indian Head Pastoral Charge was formed as a United Church charge in 1925, part of Qu'Appelle Presbytery. In addition to St. Andrew's United Church (Indian Head), preaching appointments later included Sunny Slope (in the 1930s) and Hope (ca.1940).

Fort Qu'Appelle Pastoral Charge

  • SCAA-UCCS-0456
  • Corporate body
  • 1925–

Fort Qu'Appelle Pastoral Charge was formed as a United Church charge in 1925, part of Abernethy Presbytery and consisting of preaching points at Fort Qu'Appelle (St. Andrew's United Church), Springbok and Sanitarium. As of 1932, the charge included Wideawake and was (briefly) listed as Fort Qu'Appelle - Sanitorium Pastoral Charge. As of 1936, preaching appointments had shifted to consist of Fort Qu'Appelle, Hughesvale, Fort San and Wide Awake. Lipton was added in the late 1940s and, by 1951, the charge was made up of Fort Qu'Appelle, Fort San and Springvale appointments. As of 1962, only Fort Qu'Appelle and Lipton were listed as part of the charge.

Knox Metropolitan United Church (Regina)

  • Corporate body
  • 1912-

Built around 1912, Metropolitan Methodist Church became Metropolitan United Church in 1925 (part of the United Church of Canada). It was later re-named Knox-Metropolitan United Church, with the amalgamation of downtown Regina's Knox United Church and Metropolitan United Church.

McManus, Herbert A.

  • SCAA-UCCS-0198
  • Person
  • 18??–1947

Herbert A. McManus was a Presbyterian and then United Church Minister, who served several congregations in Saskatchewan, from around 1917 through 1946.

McIntyre, Earl D.

  • SCAA-UCCS-0197
  • Person
  • 1916–1998

Earl D. McIntyre was a United Church minister, who served in Preeceville, Saskatchewan (1967-1972) and Manitoba.

MacDonnell, W.A.

  • SCAA-UCCS-0193
  • Person
  • 18??–19?? [after 1934]

Knox Presbyterian Church (Regina)

  • Corporate body
  • 1905?-1951

The congregation at Knox Presbyterian Church appears to date back to around 1882, building a church in 1885, at the corner of Scarth Street and 11th Avenue, and a later replacement in 1905. Knox joined the United Church of Canada in 1925. In 1951, Knox United Church amalgamated with Metropolitan United Church, to become Knox-Metropolitan United Church (and Pastoral Charge), located on the site of the former Metropolitan United Church, at the corner of Victoria Avenue and Lorne Street.

Saskatoon Third Avenue Pastoral Charge

  • SCAA-UCCS-0339
  • Corporate body
  • 1925–2018

Saskatoon Third Avenue Pastoral Charge was formed as as a new United Church charge in 1925, under Saskatoon Presbytery. It closed June 30, 2018.

Moose Jaw Grandview Pastoral Charge

  • SCAA-UCCS-0214
  • Corporate body
  • 2001–2012

Moose Jaw Grandview Pastoral Charge was formed after the dissolution of the joint Moose Jaw Trinity-Grandview Pastoral Charge, in June 2001. The charge officially closed on June 30, 2012.

United Church of Canada. AOTS

  • SCAA-UCCS-0230
  • Corporate body
  • ca.1923–

AOTS (As One That Serves) is a men’s organization, drawing its membership from the United Church while maintaining an independent organizational and financial structure. It began within Methodist congregations of Vancouver in 1923, and remained a fully independent operation as it spread across the country, finally adopting a Nation Association of AOTS Clubs in 1947. As the organization grew within United Church congregations there arose a confusion concerning its relationship to the church and the United Church Men. In 1954 AOTS became a department of the newly-constituted Board of Men. In September 1959 the first National Association AOTS Men’s Clubs was constituted.

In 1963, the Conference United Church Men’s Council (a new structure at Conference and Presbytery levels), with all men’s club work being the responsibility of a Men’s Club Committee of the Council. The AOTS National Council become the Men’s Club Committee if the Board of Men. With the 1971 creation of the Division of Mission in Canada, the Board of Men was dissolved and AOTS was on its own, although it retained a connection with the new Division. A new constitution in 1975 reverted to the name ‘National Council of the United Church AOTS Men’s Clubs’ (dropping the title ‘Men’s Club Committee’), while at the regional level the Conference and Presbytery Men’s Club Committees returned to Conference and District Councils of United Church AOTS Men’s Clubs.

(Text based on UCC Archives catalog entry, as of 2023-March.)

Results 76 to 90 of 470