Methodist Church (Canada) Regina-Moosomin District
- SCAA-UCCS-0059
- Corporate body
- 190?–?
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Methodist Church (Canada) Regina-Moosomin District
Methodist Church (Canada) Regina District
Methodist Church (Canada) Prince Albert District
Methodist Church (Canada) Oxbow District
Methodist Church (Canada) Moosomin District
Methodist Church (Canada) Moose Jaw District
Methodist Church (Canada) Kindersley District
Methodist Church (Canada) Goose Lake District
Methodist Church (Canada) Battleford District
Methodist Church (Canada) Balcarres District
Methodist Church (Canada) Arcola District
The Methodist Church of Canada was established in 1874, with the union of the Wesleyan Methodist Church in Canada, the Wesleyan Methodist Church of Eastern British America, and the Methodist New Connexion Church. In 1883, a United General Conference was held a year before the union of the Methodist Church of Canada with the Methodist Episcopal, the Primitive Methodist, and the Bible Christian Churches to form the Methodist Church (Canada) in 1884.
In 1925, the Methodist Church in Canada joined with several other Protestant denominations to become the United Church of Canada.
[Information from United Church of Canada Archives (Toronto) database entry "Methodist Church of Canada", as of 2023.]
John McLachlan was a Methodist and later United Church minister in Saskatchewan and Ontario. He was born and raised in the fishing village of Tarbet, Scotland. He immigrated to Canada, and was a probationer in Adanac, Saskatchewan, in 1909, before being ordained, in 1910. He studied at Wesley College, Winnipeg, 1911-1915, and served charges in Saskatchewan and Ontario until he retired in 1953.
Fred Martin was a Methodist minister, who served in Saskatchewan at North Portal, Dinsmore, Piapot, and Swift Current. He was received on trial at North Portal in 1908 and attended Wesley College (Winnipeg), from 1909 to 1914, before being ordained in 1915. He was minister at Piapot (1916–1917) and supplied at Swift Current (1918–1921).