THE year 1881 will be remembered by
Western Canadians as long as an old timer survives to recount the wild
tales of those wild days. The country was possessed of a spirit of
adventure. Land fever, the germs of which lie in every human heart, had
smitten the peoples into whose ears had come the rumour of the wheat lands
of Western Canada. For three years, ever since the railway had made the
West easily accessible, this rumour had spread till in the townships of
Eastern Canada the sturdy farmer and his sons had caught a vision of wide
stretches of waving wheat reaching to the horizon, and, selling their
narrow fields, they had "struck" the Western trail. Into the remote and
secluded hamlets of the home countries, too, across the sea, this rumour
of land had made its way, and falling upon the ears of the land-hungry
among these sorely be-taxed and be-feud folk, had set a fever burning in
their bones till they sold all and sailed for the far away West. And,
small wonder, for here was land, rich and deep and free to all who
cared to "take it up," land without feu or rental, with no shadow of
overlord or factor or rent-racker to fall across it, land free as God’s
free air. No wonder the peoples went mad. But, alas! out of this fever
greed would make gain, for however land may be free from the hand of God,
by man’s hand are burdens soon laid upon it. Hence, men began traffic in
land, till for the poor man none was available but such as lay far from
civilization.
And so west and south and north the
land-seekers thronged the back trails, disappearing over the rim of the
prairie and forgotten—but not by all. Fathers and mothers could not forget
their sons, and the great mother Church, too, remembered her children with
longing, and with a sense of responsibility more or less deep. Hence, the
Superintendent of Western Missions.
His was even then a field of
"magnificent distances." For though the settlements lay for the most part
within a radius of two hundred miles from Winnipeg, from the far
hinterland there came tales of little settlements and lonely
homesteaders beyond touch of their Church, and now and then a cry from
some distant outpost for help, as from far-off Edmonton, nine hundred
miles away. None too soon had the Manitoba Presbytery overtured the
Venerable the General Assembly for a man to be given the task of finding
out and of caring for these lonely settlers, and none too soon that august
body, charged with the spiritual shepherding of nearly a thousand families
that were known to be strewn far and wide over a thousand miles of
prairie, had, set apart a man to be eyes and ears and hands to the Church
on behalf of these her far-strewn children, who, in their hunger for land
and treasure, were sorely tempted to forget that better country and the
treasure that will not pass away. But to find them out and to bring them
under the Church’s care was a task which seemed to the Committee in
Toronto almost beyond their resources to accomplish. The treasury was
empty, labourers could not be had, and the Church as a whole was all but
indifferent, because only vaguely aware of the facts.
To this as a first duty, therefore,
the new Superintendent set himself, to get to know the facts himself, and
then to get his Church to know them. For he had this faith, that having
clear knowledge of these facts, at once terrible and inspiring, the Church
could not rest indifferent to them. And throughout the whole course of his
superintendency this twofold duty he kept steadily in mind and ever strove
to fulfill, to know the facts and to make his Church know them.
Given a work to do, the
Superintendent was not the man to delay its doing. And so, in less than a
week after he has entered upon his office, we find him on the trail. On
the 24th of July of this year, 1881, the Presbytery dissolved the tie that
bound him to Knox Church, and on July 29th we have him writing to his wife
from Dominion City: "I am making my first official visit as Superintendent
of Missions to this place to-day." Dominion City is in a tangle and is
discouraged, and it is significant of all his future service that his
first bit of work is to compose difficulties and to cheer on the
discouraged. From Dominion City he proceeds to Morris, where he conducts
service on the Sabbath day, returning to Winnipeg the day after. "I do not
know what course I shall take after that," he writes. "I am now inclined
to visit the Little Saskatchewan country first. Things are in a bad state
there, I fear." It will always be so. Where things are in a bad state,
there will this Superintendent be found.
He decides that his first missionary
tour shall be in the Little Saskatchewan country, but before he leaves the
city there is a difficulty to be met which concerns his fellow-workers in
the West. Their fields have fallen into arrears of salary till there is
due the somewhat serious amount of $1,789.67. With the Convener of the
Assembly’s Home Mission Committee upon the spot, the moment is favourable
for settlement, and so a conference is held, and it is agreed that the
missionaries shall lose $568. 00, the Manitoba Presbytery shall raise
$761.67, and the remaining $500 the Convener undertakes on behalf of the
Eastern Committee. So, in the month of August, with the slate clean, the
Superintendent with his new horse and buckboard, into which he packs his
new tent and camp outfit, sets off for the Little Saskatchewan country.
The 20th of August finds him in Brandon, from which
he writes to his wife:
"My DEAR WIFE :— "By the heading of
this you will see that I have reached the city of Brandon at last. My last
to you was, I think (I am passing so quickly, though, I almost forget),
from Milford. I went up to Lang’s Valley and arranged for service there,
and finding I could not cross the Souris without some risk, I concluded to
return to Milford and cross by the ferry. I then came to Mair’s Landing
and stayed there all night. Yesterday morning I struck out for the Brandon
Hills, about eleven miles out, and called at Killam’s. After finding out
all the Presbyterians in that neighbourhood, I came over to Bertram’s,
about two miles, and had the horse fed and got dinner for myself. It was
raining some, but not much. I started away and called at Mr. Chapman’s.
They were busy shocking up some wheat. Moving on, I called at one house
and found three women; explained to them the object of my visit and
inquired as to the possible injury R— might do us in the course he has
chosen to adopt." B— is a disgruntled missionary who, being unequal to the
task of shepherding the flock, determines to have his rightful share of
the fleece as compensation; a natural enough desire, but one wholly
repellent to the soul of the Superintendent and disastrous to the work he
has in hand. "I found his influence is little. He has disgusted many by
his selfish and secular course. I found, moreover, that the Nova Scotians
who came over with him to the south side of the Assiniboine are few in
number. Proceeding on my way, I came to his house, and they asked me to
stay to tea. I accepted the offer and left soon after. I ascertained from
him that there were several Presbyterians to the west and north of the
Brandon Hills. Got the names of all he knew. Got him to give me a
statement of his claim for expenses. It is rather flimsy, but it is better
paid. He got $150 from the people, and claims $300 more for expenses.
"After leaving his house, went on my
way to Brandon after dark, and a dark, murky, rainy night it was. Had to
cross about four hundred acres of breaking. When I got there, went with my
horse to a stable and had him looked after. Went up to Mrs. Douglas’ house
and found that she could not accommodate me. Concluded to tent. Her young
fellows offered to help me to pitch tent and get hay. Got to work and soon
had things snug and comfortable, and was soon asleep. This morning I got
up betimes and looked out—foggy it all looked and a heavy odour of skunk
was in the air. Got breakfast and found horse all right. Stay here
tomorrow and go to Grand Valley and Boggy Creek. Am in excellent health
and enjoy trip very much."
Thus filling his note-book with
statistics of all kinds, he pursues his way, going still north and west,
everywhere discovering lost and strayed sheep of the Presbyterian fold,
and everywhere leaving behind him something in the way of organization for
their shepherding and much good hope and comfort. A letter, dated four
days later, finds him still further north and west of Bran-don. Having
left Rapid City behind him, he writes as follows:
"You see I have made another stage
in my tour. I sent you a letter from Brandon in the morning. The
attendance at Brandon was about sixty. The service was held in an
unfinished house. In the afternoon, I preached at Grand Valley, about
three miles down the river. The building was a rude shanty. The gaps
between the boards were large and the place was airy. There was no floor,
not even a door, except a board nailed across to keep cattle out. Birds
had come in freely during the week evidently, and left traces of their
presence on the desk. There was an attendance of about sixty-five. At the
close of the service in both places I explained to the people the state of
our Mission fund and got committee appointed and to work. Got back to
Brandon by dusk and found about seventy teams crossing the ferry from the
north to the south side of the Assiniboine loaded with railroad plant and
oats. It is too bad that there should be such utter disregard of the
Sabbath and its claims.
"Was in time to hear part of a
sermon from Professor Burwash of Victoria University, Cobourg. Went out on
Monday to Elton, about twelve or thirteen miles, to a station of Mr.
Hyde’s. Quite a number assembled there and I preached and organized
committees and gave directions. I returned home aud went to call on a
minister, Mr. F—, who is settled at Grand Valley, but who does not come to
church. I found him at home, but his residence was rude and uncomfortable.
He had some men harvesting for him and a neighbour woman cooking. The
place was very uninviting. Had a long talk with him and a service with him
and men, and found that he made the excuse of poverty the plea for
non-attendance on ordinances.
"Drove to Brandon, and, after
putting horse away, went through the town to find out who lived in it.
Nobody appears to know anybody else there. They speak to each other, but
do not know each other’s names. Went to one store and found a man taking
in some goods that had been exposed all day at the door. I asked whose
store it was, thinking him a clerk. He scratched his head and said, ‘Well,
I don’t know what his name is. We call him Johnny.’
"Next morning did the rest of
Brandon and found out who the Presbyterians are. Gave a list to Mr.
Ferries and told him to visit them all and any others coming in. It will
never do to have him stationed out so far. If he is to be minister there
he must reside in the town." Mr. Ferries is, doubtless, on a homestead,
seeking to establish for himself and his family a home, a laudable enough
idea, but inconsistent with the best results for "the Cause," hence the
Superintendent will have him change his base. The Cause is first; all
else, however worthy, is second. "Took steps also for a place in which to
worship all winter. Nobody there has any means, and all are too busy with
their own affairs to do anything except they are urged. Mr. F— has not the
confidence either. Fear I must return in a short time there. Nothing was
done in either place for winter supply. Left Brandon and travelled to
Rapid City, twenty or twenty-five miles. Left there to come to Mr.
Smith’s."
At this point he is upon the
borderland of civilization, but still he presses his way into the then
unknown territory, till he reaches the Hudson’s Bay Company’s post at Fort
Ellis, from which he writes the following note to his wife:
"I arrived here last evening at
sunset and held service with the men at the Fort. Mr. McDonald is absent
at Grand Valley. Mrs. McDonald did much to make me comfortable. Mr.
Hodnett came up with me. He goes back this morning, and I go alone to
Shell River, thirtyfive miles distant. There is a good trail, the day is
fine, and I have no fear. There was frost here last night, the first of
the season. The scenery here is very fine. Next year I must bring you West
here to see snatches of scenery that have pleased me much. The country
here differs much from what we have in Eastern Manitoba."
By September 27th he is on his
return journey, working his way back towards Winnipeg where he has to meet
his Presbytery with his Report. Arriving at Gladstone, he writes to his
wife as follows, anxious to keep in touch with her as best as he can:
"You see I am coming nearer the
borders of civilization. I am now within forty miles or so of the cars,
and that distance can be travelled in a day.
"I left Salisbury on the morning of
yesterday and drove to the Beautiful Plains country. For a time the land
looked well, although it is somewhat light.
"We reached McGregor Station about
three o’clock, and saw quite a number of people about the door. The house
was full of very respectable people and I found that there were eight
children to be baptized. After service we discussed Church matters and had
fifty or sixty dollars subscribed on the spot for Mr. Stewart’s salary.
The McGregors are from near our place and knew my father’s people. Stayed
all night. I knew we should be among the beasts at Ephesus at night, but I
was resigned. They were all very kind—not the beasts—but one could see at
once that the whole place must be full of ." This was a condition of
things almost universally prevalent at that time in stopping places
throughout the West, and one it was almost impossible to prevent, but none
the less trying for that. Many a night will he be driven from his bed
before "the beasts" have done with him. "Such were my thoughts, and I was
not disappointed. My arms and neck had plenty of pink marks with a dark
spot in the centre as I washed myself this morning. This morning they took
us out after breakfast to see the garden, and it was a fine sight.
"Made a number of calls this
afternoon. To-morrow (D. V.) we go to Blake township, northwest of
Gladstone. To-morrow evening there is a tea meeting when they expect to
pay off the debt on the church. Friday we go to Pine Creek and Saturday we
have a meeting here. Sabbath I preach here in the morning, at Woodside in
the afternoon and Westbourne in the evening. Next morning I drive to
Portage la Prairie and reach Winnipeg that night. The meeting of
Presbytery is the following Wednesday and I must prepare my report of work
done and get ready for the meeting in Toronto. I intend to come back to
Burnside and preach on October 8th, and see the stations under Mr. McRae’s
charge. This will occupy my time for two days or so. I intend to leave for
Toronto about Thursday of that week and will try and reach you Saturday,
so as to spend Sabbath and Monday there. I am trying to arrange ahead,
although it is not easy. I ought to return in time to visit stations south
of the Assiniboine before winter."
In this whirlwind manner, preaching,
visiting, organizing, crowding his days and his nights full of work, he
brings to a close his first missionary tour, having driven his buckboard
over 2,000 miles and having conducted nearly 200 meetings of various
kinds.
He brought back with him a great
wealth of knowledge, exact, and in detail, concerning every village, every
settlement and, indeed, every homestead he had visited. The country and
its resources, the people, their ancestry, their characteristics, their
prospects, their difficulties, too, and their needs, the progress of
railway building, the administration of Government, the undeveloped wealth
of the country, the educational requirements, on these and other subjects
relative to the country and its people, he had gathered interesting, full
and accurate information. Into his little black note-book, but still more
into his tenacious memory, he had packed this knowledge, and all of it he
will use some day, for the good of his people and for the glory of God.
On the 11th of October the
Assembly’s Home Mission Committee met in Toronto, and to this Committee
the Superintendent presented his first report. That was a distinguished
Committee, and it was not without trepidation he met them. He was new to
the work and there were great men on that Committee, some of the greatest
the Canadian Church has known, among them leaders like Cochrane, King,
Warden, Macdonnell, Laing, Taylor. No wonder he is conscious of some
tremors. But the day will come when he will stand the peer of any of them.
Modestly he presents his report, making light of his labour’s, but making
much of the needs of the people he represents, and of the opportunities
the field offers. The report is received and considered, and, doubtless,
is adopted, though of this there is no record. Nor is there mention of a
single word of appreciation by this Committee of the work done by the new
Superintendent. But there is demand made of him by this financially
exacting and painstaking Committee for a report as to the expenditure of a
thousand dollars granted the spring before for exploratory work. This,
happily, the Superintendent can give, but only in the merest outline. The
Committee, however, with a conscience for trust funds will have no outline
report in the matter of expenditure of money. So, with the thanks of his
Committee, or without them, the record does not say, but with their demand
that he should account rigidly for that thousand dollars, he goes back
again to his work, and December finds him again on the trail in Southern
Manitoba, where, in company with the newly appointed missionary of Pilot
Mound, the Rev. James Farquharson, a man truly after his own heart, he
drives over a large section of that country. The following extract from a
letter written long afterwards by Dr. Farquharson gives a vivid picture of
some of their experiences on that trip:
"Dr. Robertson came to my place
December, 1881. He visited the stations now organized as Pilot Mound,
crystal City, LaRiviere, and Snowflake. Preaching on the Sabbath at
Preston and Pilot Mound, on Monday he held a meeting at Clearwater to see
what would be done towards calling a minister. After dinner we started for
Cartwright, sixteen miles west.
"I stayed in a shack, the Doctor
visiting two families. He came back that night, not having received an
invitation to remain at either place he visited over night. We passed a
night never to be forgotten by either of us.
"Next morning we went to Mr.
LaRiviere’s at Turtle Mountain, a distance of thirty miles, over a bleak
prairie. The Doctor preached there and left an appointment for
organization on our return. Mr. LaRiviere had treated us with very great
kindness. He was a French Canadian. The next morning we drove along the
base of the mountains sixteen miles, and had dinner at Mr. Miller’s. Left
an appointment for our return; continued west sixteen miles to Mr.
Newcome’s and stayed over night, preached and organized there, and
baptized some children. Kindly treated by Mr. Newcome, who was Dominion
Land Agent.
"Returned for the night to Mr.
Miller’s. The Doctor preached, organized, and baptized. We took a list of
members of the Episcopalian and Methodists to present to their own
Churches." He is frankly and very keenly a Presbyterian, but he is a
gentleman as well, and a Christian, and on his record there is no stain by
reason of failure in the Christian courtesy that refuses to take advantage
of a sister Church. "Were very kindly treated. Returned to Mr. LaRiviere’s,
preached, organized, and remained over night. It was pleasant to see how
he would get the confidence of the people. He was simply Mr. Robertson,
one of themselves.
"We broke our cutter, and had to buy
a jumper from the half-breeds. We fastened the cutter on top of the
jumper, and the next morning drove to my place, a distance of fifty miles.
"It was on that tour that Dr.
Robertson decided that the number of children for a school should be
changed from fourteen to eight. Owing to the amount of railroad land, the
country was very thinly settled. As he expressed it—we must meet the
educational needs of the children, or the next generation will grow up in
ignorance. At the first meeting of the School Board in Winnipeg he brought
the matter up and had the number changed from fourteen to eight scholars
for a school.
"I have heard Dr. Robertson tell how
the vermin he carried with him after that night at Cartwright became so
intolerable that when he reached LaRiviere’s little store at what is now
Wakopa, he bought a suit of underclothing. When he asked for the clothing,
LaRiviere said, ‘What? Did you sleep at the Badger?’ (The early name for
Cartwright.)"
A little later the tour of this part
of Manitoba was completed, of which Dr. Farquharson writes as follows:
"Again I accompanied him on a tour
of visitation for four or five days. He usually addressed two meetings a
day, and always one, and drove from ten to twenty miles. We had expected
that the meeting on the Friday evening would close the week’s work, so
that each of us might return to our place of preaching for the Sabbath;
but at the close of the Friday evening meeting we learned that there was a
settlement about twelve miles further on, composed largely of
Presbyterians, in which there was no service. Immediately our plans were
changed, so that Saturday could be spent in the new settlement. That night
was spent in ‘a stopping place,’ and Dr. Robertson and I roomed together
in a small bedroom off the sitting room. We roomed together, but we slept
not, neither did we lie down to rest. A hurried inspection revealed the
fact that the bed was preempted by the living pest which a man shakes not
off, as in the morning he crawls from under the bed clothing. We
determined to keep the fire in the sitting-room going, and so maintain a
degree of comfort during the winter night. But some parties, by making a
bed beside the sitting-room stove, spoiled our plan and imprisoned us in
our room for the night. We walked the floor, we jumped, and, if not very
artistically, at least with some vigour, we danced, that the temperature
of the body might be maintained at a considerably higher rate than the
temperature of the room. The night passed, and so did the breakfast hour,
and we started on our twelve-mile drive.
"On arriving at the centre of the
settlement, a house for the evening meeting was very cordially placed at
our disposal, and we started to drive round the settlement for the purpose
of inviting the people to the meeting. Returning, we had supper and
awaited the arrival of the congregation.
"In a small dwelling-house with low
ceiling, some twenty settlers gathered for the service. What is there in
such a meeting place or in such a company to arouse the enthusiasm of the
preacher? There would have been nothing surprising if the languor incident
to a week of such work and a sleepless night had robbed the address of
every particle of life. Yet Dr. Robertson spoke with all the vigour of the
man who steps out from his comfortable study to an equally comfortable
church and a congregation capable of inspiring enthusiasm for the one
service of the day. That night another station was added to Manitoba’s
rapidly growing list of preaching stations.
"Early next morning we parted, Dr.
Robertson to go west and I east. He would travel at least forty miles that
day, probably more."
Nothing appeared to tire him, so, at
least, we thought at that time. We found later that the eager, invincible
spirit was chafing thin even that sinewy body.
So the winter months find him still on the trail,
heedless of frost or blizzard, till the holiday season is upon him, and he
writes this touching Christmas letter dated December 26th from Winnipeg,
Man.
"Mr DEAR WIFE:— "It is nearly four
in the morning and I have not gone to bed yet. I am going west to-morrow,
or rather to-day, as far as Big Plains, and 1 am getting things into
shape. I have been writing all day and have just got through. Xmas was a
quiet day with me this year. Many a time during the day I wondered what
you were all doing. I would have given a good deal to have been with you.
What did my poor children get for presents this year, and mamma? I could
not get anything through the post of any account, and I concluded to get
my presents when I went down. How I would have liked to see their pleasant
glee and to hear their noises in the morning. But I must do without, this
year. I went into several stores on Saturday and envied the folks buying
for their children. But after this year I trust to be with you at Xmas.
Mr. Hart invited Thomson and myself for midday dinner. We had a swell
affair, though no plum pudding. A special dinner was served at the Queens
at night. I send you the bill of fare. The place was hung with Chinese
lanterns and everything was most tastefully arranged. The waiting, as
usual, was abominable, and the dinner was spoiled. The folks succeeded in
getting well drunk. I got away after the eating was done. I thought I saw
some women who were a little funny after the affair..... . . .
I am trying to get up a church building
scheme. I enclose a circular so that you can see what it
is. It is necessary that something be done. I am promised some aid here,
and after canvassing the city I will see what can be done below.
"Knox Church is talking about selling the Church again.
They want $100,000, for it. Should they get it I want them to head the
list with
the
East in the interests of the Church and Manse Building Fund, in which
business he will persist till the meeting of the General Assembly. To that
Assembly he presents his first report as Superintendent of Missions. That
report goes far to settle the mind of the Church as to the wisdom of its
action in making appointment of a Superintendent of Missions. The report
does more. It impresses upon the Church the fact that henceforth, and for
some years, there must be serious reckoning with the mission field lying
beyond the Lakes. There is something doing in that country, and the Church
would do well to take heed thereof. Those buckboard journeys of the
Superintendent have been productive of valuable discoveries, 1,000
families, for instance, 900 Presbyterian young men and young women, mostly
young men, 900 members in full communion, all of whom, till the
Superintendent found them, had escaped the observation of the Church. More
than this, the report awakened suspicion that there were still many
undiscovered in the byways of the new land. But something had been
accomplished for the shepherding of these. No fewer than forty new
stations had been planted upon the prairie, and fourteen new congregations
had been settled, while, to use his own great phrase, "visibility and
permanence" had been given to the cause by the erection of ten new
churches. Further, the report makes evident that the appointment of a
Superintendent has been financially justified, for by reason of
organization and good management there has accrued to the coffers of the
Church a gain of $26,000 over last year, and for the Home Mission Fund
alone an increase of more than what will pay the Superintendent’s salary.
In that first report we catch two notes that presage a
policy in mission and educational administration fraught with large
advantage to the West. One, the warning that the abandoning of mission
fields during the winter season means serious loss to the Church; the
other, the suggestion that for the adequate supply of missionaries for the
West there must one day be a Western Theological College. In this warning
and in this suggestion we have the germs of the Summer Session, and of the
Theological Department of Manitoba College.
But wonderful as had been the development of the
country and the expansion of Home Mission operations during the year
1881—1882, when the Superintendent met the General Assembly of 1883 he had
a story to tell that made that venerable body sit wide awake. This report
for 1883 is perhaps in some senses the greatest paper ever presented to
the Presbyterian Church in Canada. It is a striking presentation of
startling and inspiring facts and is a masterpiece of logical and incisive
reasoning, and it
is worthy of a permanent place in the story of the
making of Western Canada. It is the statement, not of a churchman alone
interested in the progress of his peculiar denomination. True, he is an
official of the Presbyterian Church, but he is more; he is a Canadian,
loyal, devoted to his country’s good, and enthusiastically optimistic for
the West and pledged to its development. He is a statesman with a
statesman’s eye for strategic moments in the national life. He is a man of
affairs with instincts for financial returns. But, more than all, he is a
man with human sympathies, keenly alive to the trials and struggles of men
and women fighting their long lonely fight as pioneers in a new land. The
report is worth reading. Here, for instance, is a picture of the West
striding on to greatness:
"Last year witnessed a greater advance in the work of
our Church in the Northwest than any previous year in its history. The
construction of the Canadian Pacific Railway has given a great impetus to
settlement. Large numbers of men find employment in building the road and
in procuring ties and timber. The railway affords to settlers a quick and
easy method of reaching the fertile lands of the interior, and provides a
market for the products of the soil. The Government Railway and Land
Companies have also succeeded in directing a considerable portion of the
stream of emigration, from Great Britain and the continent of Europe, to
the Northwest. Few are aware of how rapidly the country is being settled.
Nearly 450 miles of the main line were graded and ironed last season. For
300 miles west of Brandon the road lies through a continuous stretch of
good agricultural land. For twelve or fifteen miles on both sides of the
line the even numbered sections have been preempted, or entered as
homesteads. The railway company, owing to its liberal terms, has also
disposed of a good deal of its land contiguous to the line. Large
settlements are also found along the left bank of the Qu’Appelle and the
right bank of the South Saskatchewan. Southwestern Manitoba has attracted
a large number of immigrants, and they have passed westward over the
boundary line into the new Province of Assiniboia. For 125 miles west of
the Turtle Mountain there is now a continuous settlement. It would be
within the mark to say that between eighty and one hundred townships, of
thirty-six square miles each, were settled in this quarter alone during
the year. In other words, there were two belts settled last season, the
one along the railway west of Brandon, about 300 miles in length (as far
as from Toronto to Montreal), and from twenty-five to fifty in width; and
the other in Southwestern Manitoba, 125 miles in length, and from eighteen
to twenty-five miles wide."
And who in all Canada was aware of all this taking
place ? And who would look for such facts in a Church report ? The report
proceeds: "Much land in the eastern parts of the country, which had been
passed over by the fastidious settlers of a few years ago, was also taken
up. Settlement is also stretching northward, from Fort Qu’Appelle towards
Prince Albert, a number of families having found a home last year in the
neighbourhood of the Touchwood Hills. Along the railway, towns and
villages are fast springing up, which will soon become important centres
of trade. Two years ago, in Brandon there was not a house; now there is a
town of 4,000 souls. Steps are taken everywhere to effect municipal
organization, and to provide schools and the other requisites of civilized
life."
He can speak with authority, for well does he know
every municipality. He has driven through them all in his buckboard or
cutter. Then like a knife-thrust he
pierces the conscience of his Church with this pertinent question,
"What is to be done for the spiritual welfare of such centres?" That
question he will continue to press, now in one form and now in another,
till the Church will take heed. Then, remembering be is addressing himself
especially to Presbyterians, he gives them this as food for thought:
"The volume of immigration last season was estimated at
between 45,000 and 50,000. As in the past, the newcomers were largely
members and adherents of our own Church. The arrivals from England and
Scotland were more numerous than in any previous year. They express
themselves as pleased with the country and their prospects, and are
inviting their relatives and acquaintances to join them. Through the
influence of our present population we may confidently expect that for
years to come immigration from Ontario and Britain will be largely of the
religious complexion of past years. The Presbyterian Church, therefore,
should regard as settled the fact that upon her falls largely the
responsibility of giving the Gospel to this incoming population."
"Responsibility," that is the word for a Church with a
conscience towards God in regard to the country in which by His eternal
decree she finds herself placed. She has been attempting to meet this
responsibility, and with some success. But the report goes on: "Only
occasional supply could be given west of Braudon during the autumn and
winter. There were nearly 400 townships in which were to be found
thousands of Presbyterians to whom no minister of our Church broke the
Bread of Life. During the last six months there were extensive districts
in which no minister of any Church conducted religious servjces." And then
follows this pregnant word: "If Christian effort is thus stinted in the
infancy of the country, permanent injury will be inflicted."
The problem of mission work in the West is, in the last
analysis, a problem of men. Given a sufficient number of missionaries and
of the right stamp, and the highest interests of the country will be
secure. But not every man will do. So the Superintendent has discovered.
"The minister that will attract and hold these people
must commend himself to them as a man and a Christian. With them the
office and denomination will avail little; but personal character and
pulpit-power much. The lame in intellect, or the limping in education,
will have a thin audience." Good men they must be, but they must be well
cared for. Hence salaries must be adequate and homes provided. "No Church
can afford to starve its pioneers." But though the supply of labourers has
been woefully inadequate, the progress of the work has not been
inconsiderable. Whereas in 1882 there was reported a gain of forty
stations, this year the gain is fifty-one, and fourteen congregations have
erected church buildings.
The Superintendent always has an eye to the hardheaded
Scots that form the majority of the business men of his Church, and to
whom he well knows he must look for the financial support of this great
work, and, therefore, he is at pains to make it clear that this Home
Mission business is a paying investment. And hence, the report calls
attention to the fact that there has been a gain throughout the Presbytery
in contributions for the support of the ministry of over $12,000, in
contributions for the schemes of the Church, a gain of nearly $2,500 and
for all purposes a gain of nearly $40,000. This astonishing result will be
in the Superintendent’s hands a mighty lever for the prying open of the
money chests of these same business men.
The report closes with an exhaustive estimate of the
undeveloped resources of the country in agricultural products, cattle and
horses, coal and other minerals. The final words of this report constitute
this noble appeal:
"The next few years are to decide largely the religious
future of this country. God is calling on us to go in and possess the
land. The success vouchsafed to us in the past, the possibilities of the
country and the religious wants of its people, should stimulate us, as
patriots, as men and Christians, to accomplish what God has given us to
do. May God grant that we may discern the signs of the times and in His
strength go forward."
The effect upon the Assembly of this great report and
of the modest but great speech of the Superintendent is remembered yet by
many who were present that day. In that brief hour, it is safe to say, the
Church passed into a distinctly new era of Home Mission work. She began to
realize somewhat dimly, it is true, that the day of small things had gone,
that the time for large measures had come.
It was this Assembly of 1883 that, in response to an
overture from Manitoba Presbytery, instituted a Theological Faculty in
Manitoba College, and appointed as Principal and Proffessor in Divinity,
one of her most distinguished ministers, holding one of the most important
charges in the Church.
Seldom has the wisdom of the General Assembly been more
signally manifested than in the choice of the Rev. J. M. King, at
that time minister of St. James’ Square Church, Toronto, to be Principal
of Manitoba College. In a time of serious financial depression throughout
the Province, and with the College almost hopelessly in debt, he took
charge of its affairs, and before many years had passed was able to report
the College free of debt, with its building doubled in size, and with an
endowment fund of very considerable magnitude. From the time of his
appointment till his death, Manitoba College ranked easily first among the
educational institutions in the West.
In the promoting of the overture in Presbytery, and in
supporting it before the Assembly, the Superintendent took a leading part.
None saw more clearly than he that the moral and intellectual future of
the West was bound up with the establishing and equipping of adequate
institutions of learning. Throughout its whole history, the Superintendent
was a warm friend of the College, and between the Principal and himself
there remained unbroken to the end a bond of mutual affection and respect.
Their spheres, though distinct, included much common ground, for the
progress of the one involved that of the other, and though each of these
strong men pushed his own special work with all the intensity of his
nature, they each recognized that ultimately the aim of both was the same,
namely, the moral and spiritual elevation of Western Canada. There was no
more enthusiastic champion of Home Missions than Principal King, and no
more staunch friend of the College than the Superintendent of Missions,
though the Principal was heard to aver with that grim humour that was his
own, "The Superintendent preaches on Manitoba College and takes up a
collection for Home Missions."
It was this year, too, that the Manitoba Presbytery
presented a memorial to the Assembly praying for the division of the
Presbytery into three, and setting forth at length the arrangement
desired, with reasons therefore. The Assembly appointed a special
committee to deal with the memorial, which committee suggested that the
matter be referred to the Assembly’s Home Mission Committee.