Showing 37 results

Names
Regina (Sask.)

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.

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.

Regina Knox-Metropolitan Pastoral Charge

  • SCAA-UCCS-0247
  • Corporate body
  • 1951–

Knox-Metropolitan Pastoral Charge was formed after the Knox and Metropolitan United Church congregations amalgamated to form Knox-Metropolitan United Church, on the site of the (former) Metropolitan United Church, at the corner of Victoria Avenue and Lorne Street.

Regina Rosemont Pastoral Charge

  • SCAA-UCCS-0248
  • Corporate body
  • 1925–ca.1932, ca.1936–2012

Regina Rosemont Pastoral Charge was formed as a new United Church charge in 1925, from what had previously been a Methodist field. Around 1932, Rosemont United was listed as part of Regina Chalmers Pastoral Charge (with St. James and Chalmers United) but it was re-established as a separate charge by 1936, containing Rosemont, Estlin, St. James and Wascana United Churches. Other points were moved around the 1940s and Rosemont formed a joint-charge with Wascana, ca.1951 until about 1953, when they returned to separate charges. On September 30, 2012, Rosemont Pastoral Charge closed.

Ferguson, Robert George (Dr.)

  • Person
  • 1883-1964

Dr. Ferguson graduated from the Manitoba Medical School in 1916, while in medical school he interned under Dr. Steward a the Ninette Sanatorium. Dr. Ferguson was appointed Medical Superintendent of the Fort San Sanatorium in 1917 and retired from the League in 1948. During this time he resided at Fort San with his wife Helen and their 7 children.

Ferguson, Helen

  • Person
  • 1892-[1981]

Helen Ross was born in 1892 in Burford, Ontario. She studied art at Moulton College in Toronto before her family moved to Wynyard, Saskatchewan in 1911. She was engaged to Dr. Robert George Ferguson from 1912 until their wedding on July 5, 1916. During their engagement she trained to be a nurse at the Winnipeg General Hospital but contracted scarlet fever, diphtheria, and pneumonia towards the end of her third year and had to discontinue her training (1912-1915). After their wedding, the pair resided at the Fort San Sanatorium. After his retirement, they moved to Balfour Apartments in Regina while still summering at a cottage on Echo Lake near Fort San. Helen is remembered as an artist and for her ability to remember names, accompanying her husband as he visiting patients in the sanatorium. Helen lived past her 89th year.

Regina Wascana Pastoral Charge

  • SCAA-UCCS-0260
  • Corporate body
  • ca.1932, 195?–1996

Regina Wascana Pastoral Charge was formed around 1932 (listed as vacant) but by 1936, the church was part of Regina Rosemont Pastoral Charge. Regina Wascana Pastoral Charge appears to have been re-formed as a joint charge with Rosemont, ca.1951, then as a separate charge, by 1953. Around 1970, preaching points were listed as Grand Coulee and Sherwood. Grand Coulee moved back into its own Pastoral Charge around 1973 but Sherwood remained until it closed, June 30, 1990. Wascana Pastoral Charge itself closed on September 30, 1996.

Regina St. James Pastoral Charge

  • SCAA-UCCS-0131
  • Corporate body
  • 1925–ca.1932, ca.1946?–

Regina St. James Pastoral Charge was formed as the new United Church Regina North charge in 1925, from what had previously been the Presbyterian North Regina Condie Mission Field. The church was listed as part of Regina Chalmers Pastoral Charge, ca.1932, and later part of Regina Rosemont Pastoral Charge, ca.1936 through the early 1940s. By 1946, Regina North Pastoral Charge was re-established (but listed as vacant).

Regina Chalmers Pastoral Charge

  • SCAA-UCCS-0244
  • Corporate body
  • 1925–ca.1936, ca.1946?–1994

Regina Chalmers Pastoral Charge was formed as a new United Church charge in 1925, from what had previously been a Presbyterian field. Around 1932, it consisted of Chalmers, Rosemont and St. James congregations but these were reorganized by 1936, with Chalmers listed as under Settlement House, until the early 1940s. The Pastoral Charge was later re-established ca.1946 and eventually closed, June 30, 1994.

Regina Zion Pastoral Charge

  • SCAA-UCCS-0250
  • Corporate body
  • 1925–2015

Regina Zion Pastoral Charge was formed as a new United Church charge in 1925, containing Zion United Church, in Regina. Around 1932, Zion was listed as part of Regina Westminster Pastoral Charge but the points later re-formed into separate charges. Regina Zion Pastoral Charge officially closed on June 30, 2015.

Saskatchewan Anti-Tuberculosis Commission

  • Corporate body
  • 1921-1922

Saskatchewan Anti-Tuberculosis Commission, often mistakenly called the Royal Commission on Tuberculosis set out to "to enquire into the question of tuberculosis in Saskatchewan, and to recommend...measures to efficiently deal with the problem" (Report of the Saskatchewan. Anti-Tuberculosis Commission, A.B. Cook, 1922).

Results 1 to 15 of 37