The Church of St. Andrew and her Missions

St Andrews, Charlotte County
 
By Faye McMullon
 
The parish of St. Andrews is one of the oldest in the province of New Brunswick. In 1825 its territory extended from the Maine border to Saint John and included the islands of Passamaquoddy Bay and inland to Rollingdam and Flume Ridge.

In 1822, mass was celebrated in the home of Henry O’Neill (from County Donegal, Ireland). This home still remains; a plaque marks the location of the first mass being said. A meeting was held with Thomas Dunn, Peter Doran, Henry O’Neill and John Lockary and a collection of thirty pounds was obtained to build a church.

“The original church was small and unpretentious. John Dunn, the Collector of the Town of St. Andrews, donated the land. The lot was situated on the corner of Parr and Mary Streets.”

“Construction began in 1824 and the interior was completed in 1825. It was twenty feet by forty feet in size. The contract for the first church paid Joshua Bradford and John McCurdy the sum of nine pounds, twelve shillings (thirty-six dollars) to frame and raise the building. Thomas Dunn, Henry O’Neill and Thomas Boyle, at their own expense, were to find and provide timber, and other necessary material and what rum or other refreshments, that may be wanted to raise the building. (A copy of this contract is preserved in the Parish Archives.)

 

St Andrews c1840

St. Andrews Church c. 1840

 

The church bore this inscription. ‘Erected to the honour and Glory of the Only True and Living God AD 1825.’ Today this plaque can be seen at the Church of St. Andrew on King Street.’’1
In 1849 eleven feet were added – this included a spire and a vestry. The first bell was a present from John Wilson of Chamcook. He promised it, if he won a pending lawsuit between himself and the comptroller of the town.
 

The first baptism recorded in the church records was E. J. Carney- December 23, 1827.

The first marriage was celebrated on December 25, 1827 between Robert McEveney and Elizabeth Thompson. The witnesses were Cornelius Conley, Charles McKenna, Henry O’Neill and Bernard Sharkey. It is interesting to note that descendants of the O’Neill family and the Sharkey family are members of the congregation today.

The first interment was on March 25, 1825: Catherine Cavanagh. The cemetery (situated beside the church) was used from 1825 to 1859. Burials in the Town Limits were prohibited at that time. The St. Andrews Civic Trust restored this original Catholic Cemetery in 1977. The cemetery is maintained by the Church of St. Andrew. Below is a list of the people buried in the cemetery and where they are interred, when known.

Listing of those buried in the cemetery.

Cemetery chart for St Andrews

Note: In some locations the names are not known and in some names, the locations are not known.

The first priest was Rev. John Cummins from County Carlow, Ireland. Irish born priests included Rev. R. Vereker, Rev. James Quinn, a native of Mooncoin, County Kilkenny and Rev. Edmund Doyle, Parish of Corrigan, County Kilkenny.

There is no record in the parish archives that there was a Catholic school. But several items from local newspapers indicated that a Catholic school existed. One dated December 28, 1871 reported school examinations of the Catholic school of St. Andrew with Rev. Father Vereker in attendance. In November 1875 a notice announced the closing of the Catholic school.

In 1903 part of the old church, was moved to King Street to be used as a Parish Hall and gymnasium. It was named Andreleo Hall (after Pope Leo XIII and St. Andrew the Patron Saint of the Church and the Town). It opened in 1904 and served the parish until 1913.

This structure can still be seen today by driving along Church Lane (located off King Street).

 

St Andrews c 1887

St. Andrews c. 1887

 

Rt. Rev. John Sweeney, D. D., Bishop of Saint John dedicated the Church of St. Andrew, Saturday, October 11, 1887. The cemetery is located on Route 127, outside the town limits.

Ten stained glass windows were installed after 1900. It is interesting to note the names honoured on these memorial windows: – O’Neill, Healy, Kennedy, Coakley, Bradley, and Mahar. A marble altar rail was installed in 1925, a gift of Lady Shaughnessay in memory of her husband Sir George Thomas Shaughnessay , former President of the C.P.R. They had a home in St. Andrews that they named Fort Tipperary. Thus the Irish connection to this parish continues.

 

St Andrews today

Recent photo of St. Andrews Church by P.W.G. McMullon

 

The 1851 Census of Saint Andrews cited that 52 percent of the heads of household in St. Andrews were Irish born. Most of the Irish who remained in St. Andrews area were pre-famine. They contributed to the growth of the church and the town. Today the congregation still has members who can trace their ancestry back to these early settlers. The early clergy were Irish born, followed by many generations of priests of Irish ancestry. Names included: Cummins, vereker, Quinn, Doyle, O’Flaherty, O’Keefe, and O’Brien. There have been vocations from the Parish and these Irish families. They include: Most Rev. Timothy Casey, Rev. Patrick Bradley, Rev. Francis Bradley, Monsignor Francis O’Neill, Rev. Paul Scullin, and Rt. Rev. F.W. Lackary (St. Stephen) who was the granson of one of the original turstees of the first parish.

Several mission churches were built:

St. Patrick’s Church in Rollingdam, NB

“In 1842 a church was built at Whittier Ridge. In 1857 Rev. James Quinn directed that this church be taken apart and re-constructed in Rollingdam Station. In 1882 the church was taken down. It had been damaged by the Saxby Gale. All serviceable lumber was used and it was re-constructed in 1882.”4 It continued to be attached to the church of St. Andrew until the 1970’s.

Holy Angels Church in Flume Ridge, NB

This church was erected in 1885 during Father O’Flaherty’s time at the Church of St. Andrew. It was situated not far from the Magagdavic River, between Broackway & Sorrel Ridge. In 1864, Timothy Casey was born in Flume Ridge. He became the fourth bishop of Saint John and also the Archbishop of Vancouver in 1912.

St. Timothy’s Church on Campobello Island

St Timothy’s was constructed under the direction of Monsignor J. O’Flaherty in 1910. Mass had been celebrated in homes before the church was erected. It remained a mission church of the Church of St. Andrew until 1937.

Grand Manan Island

For a number of years the pastor from St. Andrews visited the island and celebratd mass.___________________________________________


[1] Saint John Globe – 11 Oct 1887
[2] Grant Hurley, The First Roman Catholic Church and Cemetery, a pamphlet, privately published. (no date)
[3] Saint John Globe – 11 Oct 1887
[4] Parish of St. Andrews – 1825 -1977 A Short History – D. S. Gillis

“After 60 years it became apparent that the church was in need of repairs and inadequate for the growing congregation. Rev. J. M. O’Flaherty was appointed in 1880. Land (160-square) was secured on the corner of King and Parr Streets. Plans were prepared by Mr. G. Ernest Fairweather of Saint John. The church is of wooden Gothic style and its tower and spire present a very attractive exterior. From the ground to the spire is one hundred feet. The ground space is 50 feet by 70 feet and the vestry is 17 feet by 28 feet. Over the front porch is a large 3-light window in the gable of the nave and on the King Street side is a richly ornamented pedestal and canopy (In 1902 Mr. Jules Thebaud of Paris, France donated a large statue of St. Andrew for this spot.) The ceiling of the aisles and nave are finished in wood paneling with cherry trimmings. The pews, wainscoting and sanctuary railing are of native ash, oil finished. The aisles are each 11 feet wide and the nave is 23 feet. There is an organ gallery above the main doorway. There are 56 pews and floor room for many more. Pews were made by Scott, Lawton & Love of Saint John.

“The church was built by Andrew Myles of Portland, Saint John and cost approximately $7,000. J.H. Pullen of Saint John did the painting; Levi Handy of St. Andrews the building of the foundation and plastering; Peter Carroll of St. Andrews the excavating .” The local paper described the project as “A monument to the zeal and industry of the indefatigable pastor, Father O’Flaherty”. 3
Ten stained glass windows were installed after 1900. It is interesting to note the names honoured on these memorial windows: – O’Neill, Healy, Kennedy, Coakley, Bradley, and Mahar. A marble altar rail was installed in 1925, a gift of Lady Shaughnessay in memory of her husband Sir George Thomas Shaughnessay , former President of the C.P.R. They had a home in St. Andrews that they named Fort Tipperary. Thus the Irish connection to this parish continues.

The 1851 Census of Saint Andrews cited that 52% of the heads of household in St. Andrews were Irish born. Most of the Irish who remained in St. Andrews area were pre famine. They contributed to the growth of the church and the town. Today the congregation still has members who can trace their ancestry back to these early settlers. The early clergy were Irish born, followed by many generations of priest of Irish ancestry. Names included: Cummins, Vereker, Quinn, Doyle, O’Flaherty, O’Keefe, and O’Brien. There have been vocations from the Parish from these Irish Families. They include: Most Rev. Timothy Casey, Rev. Patrick Bradley, Rev. Francis Bradley, Monsignor Francis O’Neill, Rev. Paul Scullin, Rt. Rev. F. W. Lockary (St. Stephen) who was the grandson of one of the original trustees of the first parish.

Several mission churches were built:

St. Patrick’s Church in Rollingdam, NB

“In 1842 a church was built at Whittier Ridge. In 1857 Rev. James Quinn directed that this church be taken apart and re-constructed in Rollingdam Station. In 1882 the church was taken down. It had been damaged by the Saxby Gale. All serviceable lumber was used and it was re-constructed in 1882. ”4 It continued to be attached to the church of St. Andrew until the 1970’s.

Holy Angels Church in Flume Ridge, NB

This church was erected in 1885 during Father O’Flaherty’s time at the Church of St. Andrew. It was situated not far from the Magagdavic River, between Broackway & Sorrel Ridge. In 1864, Timothy Casey was born in Flume Ridge. He became the fourth bishop of Saint John and also the Archbishop of Vancouver in 1912.

St. Timothy’s Church on Campobello Island

St Timothy’s was constructed under the direction of Monsignor J. O’Flaherty in 1910. Mass had been celebrated in homes before the church was erected. It remained a mission church of the Church of St. Andrew until 1937.


Grand Manan Island

 

Churches of the Parish of New Bandon, Gloucester County

By Wilma Murphy

 

The Parish of New Bandon, Gloucester County encompasses the region from Teaques Brook to Maisonette. The area studied here consists of the area between Teaques Brook and Pokeshaw – including the communities of Janeville, Clifton, Stonehaven, New Bandon and Canobie.

Attention to scripture and bible reading was very important and a daily event in the home for most families. The earliest record of a church in the parish of New Bandon was in a report of Rev George Best, Ecclesiastical Commissary for New Brunswick, written in 1825. The following is part of that report:

“There are two settlements in the Parish of Saumarez, the County of Northumberland1, called New Bandon and Innishannon which demand more than common notice, both from the rising importance and their anxiety for religious instruction. These settlements … are entirely peopled by Irish Protestants who are represented, in spite of disadvantages under which they have laboured, to be an industrious and exemplary set of people … About eight years ago (1816), Francis Ellis began the clearing and through his representations to his friends in Ireland, nearly all the rest who are settled there have been induced to immigrate thither and now amount to 147 persons, all of whom, save in one instance, are related to each other. They have no Protestant place of worship within 20 miles of the centre of their little colony and never appear to have been visited by a clergyman but once, which occurred about 18 months ago when Rev. Mr. Studdard from Gaspé baptized a number of their children and administered the sacrament. … These people assemble themselves together every Sabbath and read the Church Service in the morning and hold a sort of Methodist Meeting in the evening. They express great anxiety for a clergyman to be sent amongst them to whom they could look up to, not for spiritual instruction alone but for the education of their children, and they mean to make application to that effect.”

In the early church, because there was no clergyman, members of the congregation would lead the service. Also, the session had the right to administer discipline to any member of the congregation and was often called to admonish members of the church who had strayed from the straight and narrow. If the occasion warranted, a person would be admonished from the pulpit on Sunday morning, and unsettled personal disagreements between members of the congregation resulted in immediate loss of membership. Long periods would pass without seeing any clergy. When a clergyman did visit, people of other denominations would come for the Sacrament. Some even changed religion for this purpose.

 

New Bandon parish church locations

Map of New Bandon Parish Communities

 

The Churches in New Bandon

The Presbyterian Church

The first church to be built in this “downshore” region was the Presbyterian Church in New Bandon. In 1830, Richard and Martha Dawson as well as Henry Smith deeded land to John Richie, Charles Bateman and others for a church, burying ground and a schoolhouse. This church building, built in 1830, served the community for a good many years. Although this church is no longer there, the cemetery is still there. In 1884 a committee was appointed to build another church and it was decided that the new church would be constructed halfway between the communities of New Bandon and Clifton. William Jennings gave the land in Stonehaven. Work on the building began in 1884 and some of the volunteers were William Jennings, Howard Good, John Breckenridge, Telemachus Rodgers, Wallace Daley, Henry Scott, James Scott, Francis Robinson, Thomas Knowles, Francis Scott and John Daley. Work was completed in 1889.

 

The Methodist Church

In 1838, the Methodist Circuit was known as the Bathurst – New Bandon Circuit. The church was in Bathurst and this ministry served the communities of Salmon Beach, Janeville, Clifton, Stonehaven and New Bandon.

In 1832, land owned by Richard and Jane Knowles was sold to Richard Dawson, Matthew Parrot, John Parrot and Joseph Bent for the purpose of building a chapel or house wherein to Preach and perform all acts of religious worship in New Bandon. This church served its members until 1882. The following were members of the trustee board: John Dempsey Sr., William Dempsey, Garrett Hodwell Jr., John Dempsey Jr., Samuel Hornibrook, Thomas Dempsey, Nathaniel Dempsey Jr., Garrett Hodnett Sr. and William James Daley – met in 182 to see if a new church was needed by the communities. The new church was erected in 1883 and the old building was sold to the Sons of Temperance for use as a Temperance Lodge. This church and graveyard are still in New Bandon.

 

The Churches in Clifton

 

The Presbyterian Church

When the Presbyterian Church was built in Stonehaven in 1884, it served the community of Clifton as well.
 

The Anglican Church

In 1825 the people of New Bandon and Innishannon began to consider the idea of building a church. In 1836 a church was constructed in Clifton, where the cemetery is today. Land was purchased from William Knowles to the Venerable Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts. Finished in 1841, the church was consecrated by Bishop Inglis in 1843. This building served the congregation until 1901, but was replaced by another in 1886 – which was built across the highway. Shingles for the new church were hand-carved by Mrs. Fred Ellis (Gertrude Knowles) assisted by her sister, Mrs Temple Hornibrook (Thersa Knowles) and Mrs Knowles (Melinda Jagoe). This church was consecrated as Christ Church, Clifton in 1901. In 1917, the old church across the street was dismantled and the land became part of the graveyard. Christ Church is still in use today.

The Catholic Church

In Clifton, land was deeded in 1870 from James Murphy to the Roman Catholic Corporation of Chatham. Founded by Rev. William Morrisey, then the pastor of Holy Family parish in Bathurst in 1868, the Clifton mission was known as St. Colomban. It was founded at the same time as the parish of St Simon and St Jude in Grande-Anse. There were 15 families who attended this parish but the church is no longer standing. Records for this parish are now with the parish records in Grande-Anse.

Janeville

 

The Presbyterian Church
 

The Presbyterian Church in Janeville was built in 1890 on land deeded to John McEwan, James Morrison and Thomas Scott. It was purchased from Robert Caie. Today, this church is a Senior Citizens Club.

Canobie


Trinity Union Church

In the 1890’s, services in Canobie were held in the schoolhouse. Mr Hepworth (the husband of Kate Smith) encouraged the people of the community to erect a church building. In 1896 the land was deeded from Richard Ellis, a farmer, and his wife Alice, to Thomas H Smith, Walter Glendenning and Robert Sealy, all of Canobie. The church was erected on the corner of the Middle Canobie Road and used by the Presbyterian, Anglican and Methodist congregations. It became known as Trinity Union Church. Ministers from different denominations served the church on alternate Sundays. After Church Union in 1925 and the opening of the Central United Church in Clifton in 1961, the Trinity Union Church became an Anglican church. The building was sold and moved in 2007.

Salmon Beach


The Anglican Church
 

Located between Bathurst city limits and Janeville, this land was originally granted to French settlers. As early as 1827, land was granted to incoming Irish settlers. In the following years, lands were divided and sold to other Irish immigrants so that by the 1830s Salmon Beach was entirely English speaking and predominantly of Irish descent. Many of the present area residents can trace their ancestors back to these early settlers. Names such as Bateman, Norton, Watson, Willis, Egan, and Dempsey have disappeared in the last decade. However, other names such as Lidell, Ferguson, Flowers and Barry are long forgotten. Many of the residents were Anglican.

In 1827, Rev. D. G. Street reported to Bishop Medley that there was a great need for a church in Salmon Beach. Tied at the time to the Parish of Bathurst, worship was held at the Miller Brook School as early as 1870. The building of the church began in 1896 on land donated by Robert Miller and his wife Clara. There were many volunteers including John Miller and his two sons, John B and Franklin, John Norton Sr., Fred Buttimer, Robert Miller, and John Bateman and his sons, Arthur and Charles. Mrs. E. D. White donated the logs for the building. This church is still in use today and at the same location.

The Methodist Church

James Barry donated the land for the Methodist Church in Salmon Beach. It is not known when the first church was built but in 1832 there was a quarterly collection of eight shillings. Records show that there were 11 members in 1838. The present church was erected on land donated by Mr. Edmund Ellis. The cornerstone for this church was laid in 1903 and Rev. Mr. Goldsmith of Bathurst presided at the ceremony. Volunteers for the construction of the church were William and Abel Ellis, Augustus and Allen Buttimer, Lorne, Harvel and Milton White, Albert and Thomas Smith, Richard and Ernest Smith, T.J. and Leslie Smith, Archie Chapman, and George Willis. This church is still standing but today it is privately owned.
_______________________________________

[1] Now known as Gloucester County

Bibliography

______, Atlantic Canada Back Road Atlas, Oshawa, Peter Heiler Ltd, 2008

Hunter, Margaret M., Pioneer Settlers of the Bay Chaleur, Sackville, The Tribune Press, 1978.