The building fund was set up at the very
start in 1949 to start work towards building
a Church. Fund raising events such as a Strawberry
Social and pledge schemes were a constant part
of the Parish from 1949 to 1952. Because they had no
facilities or furniture, the parishioners brought everything
to the social events, mainly held at Carleton Heights
School, St. Matthew’s Church, or the Arboretum of the Central
Experimental Farm. Bert Rump worked at the Farm so he
had the inside track in arranging for the use of the Farm.
By 1952, the Parish had collected some money and pledges.
It was time to think "church."
Robert Shannon left
in 1952 and was replaced by the closest
priest, Rev. A.E.O. Anderson of St Peter’s
on Merivale. AEO, as Arthur Edward Oswald Anderson
was known, was given the task by the Bishop to
take St. Mark’s into its own building. He had very
fixed views on church designs and drove the Parish
committees towards the virtually wall-less "A" frame
type of construction. The Wardens of the time, Laurie
Baker and Bert Rump, had considerable reservations
about the design. By 1953, a compromise was reached and
active planning could be done towards construction
of a church. The basic plan called for a first stage church
with a seating capacity of 200 and a parish hall in the
basement. The Building Committee consisted of J.H. Morgan,
Chair; L.A. Gillespie, Secretary; and E.H. Grand, J.H.
Chapman, and E. Godin as members.
There were financial
problems as one could expect. It was
a heavy undertaking for the Parish and
for the growing community of young families.
At a Special Vestry in October 1952, AEO reported
that the Parish Executive Committee had met with
the Diocesan Extension Fund on October 6 and they
had obtained a definite promise of a loan of $30,000
to help start the building in the spring of 1953.
St. Mark’s Building Fund was then reported at $6,000.
AEO also said that he "was in touch with a
man who would be interested in lending us another $15,000.
We can see our way to go forward in faith." You
will realize the humour in AEO’s remarks as the man who would
loan the money was R.B. Faith.
Robert B. Faith was
a resident of Ottawa who provided the
initial funding for the Church. A Special
Vestry on June 20, 1954 authorized the Mission
to borrow either $15,000 or $20,000 if required.
The motion was moved by Jack Reid and seconded
by C. Basset, and was carried unanimously. The
Executive Committee of the Diocese approved on June
10, 1954 "St. Mark’s Church, Carleton Heights, taking
a first mortgage of $20,000 at 6% interest on the new Church."
The Faith mortgage was a five year mortgage dated January
1, 1955 and subject to renewal. Payments were $500 plus
interest payable on January 1 and July 1.
The second mortgage
of $40,000 at ½ of 1% came from the Church
Extension Commission. It was a good gesture
on the part of the Commission to accept
the second mortgage of double the amount of the first
mortgage, however they were not exactly lenders
without a genuine interest in the new Church.
The repayment schedule was installments of $1,000
each, plus interest, payable on January 2nd and July
2nd until 1975 when the remainder became due and
payable. The payment start date was January 2, 1957.
The Faith and Diocese
mortgages combined with the money raised
by the Parish was enough to build the
Church, but it was not enough to put in very many
furnishings.
There is a story
behind the $40,000 from the Church Extension
Commission and it involved Robert Shannon
who prepared the initial spade work in April
1951 in an article in the Diocesan Times under
his by-line. It lays the case for some sort of central
diocesan funding agency to help the new urban churches.
The first part of the article dealt with other areas
in Ottawa south. The last part dealt with St. Mark’s.
"...
We now come to discuss the most urgent problem
of all, the providing of a church building
for the new congregation of St. Mark’s, Carleton
Heights. This area, being south of the Experimental
Farm is almost two miles from the nearest street
car line and hence has become a community
in itself.
In 1949 a canvass
revealed that there were 44 Anglican families
in the area and this number has now grown
to more than 100 families and it is expected
that another 30 or 40 will be added this year. In
October 1949 we began a monthly Communion service
in the new school and in August 1950 we began regular
Sunday services. In September we started a Sunday School
and now have an enrollment of 53 children and six teachers.
We also have an active Ladies' Guild, a Men's club and
a Junior A.Y.P.A., and all these meetings have to be held
in the school or in the homes of parishioners.
The first annual vestry
report showed that the total receipts
for the year were $2,828.98 and since the expenses
were only $367.58, $2,400 was voted into
the building fund. The budget for 1951 calls for
the raising of $3,000 of which $1,500 is to be raised
by duplex envelopes and $1,500 by parochial organizations.
An acre of land
has been purchased as a site for a new
church and rectory, but to get the money to build
is the big problem. To erect a church in this
area without financial help from the diocese is impossible.
To wait till these people are able to raise sufficient
funds by themselves is out of reason altogether under
the present circumstances. It is true that in times
past other new housing areas had to provide their
own churches, but such areas came into being as a normal
gradual development and were not the result of a mushroom
growth on a mass-production scale to meet an acute housing
shortage such as this one. This fact, together with the extreme
high cost of these houses and the high-cost of living creates
an abnormal situation and one that is without precedent. Therefore
it cannot be compared with housing developments of other areas.
Most of these people are not living in these expensive homes
by any choice of their own. They were compelled to put themselves
in financial circumstances beyond their means by the necessity
of getting a place in which to live. These people are victims
of circumstances beyond their control and cannot be expected
to be able to provide a church in their community without
help.
In the years following
World War I, the great expansion was
in the West and North and was mostly rural. To
meet this situation the church as a unit
rose to the occasion and brought the ministrations
of the church to these people. In the years following
World War II the re-adjustment and expansion
was definitely urban and has therefore created a situation
that the diocese as a unit must try and meet by helping
to provide churches and parish halls. Since our
diocese has no funds for such purposes, it is not unreasonable
to ask the 40,000 Anglicans in this diocese to work together
as a unit and create a building fund to help solve the problem
of building new churches in these new areas. A capital
sum of $250,000 would be necessary because the South of Ottawa
area alone needs at least $75,000. This would prove a good investment
for the diocese, as in a short time these parishes would
be self-supporting and thus be able to assist in the general
upkeep of the diocese."
That piece by Robert Shannon was good staff work and
a good staff paper. Whether it was his idea or not is not
as important as having the
concept put forward to lay the foundation.
That concept of having central funding
for at least part of the money would have an important
impact on the Diocese and St. Mark’s in particular.
It wasn’t all easy and Laurie Baker, the People’s
Warden of that time, frequently referred to it
years later as "having faith." He also added at times
"It was a miracle."
Initial plans for
the Church were prepared by Jim Strutt of
Gilleland and Strutt in February and March
1954. The Parish was invited to the Community
Centre for March 1, 1954 to view a scale model
of the Church. After that, plans were prepared
in May 1954. The design theme was to provide for the
most church for the least amount of money. An "A" frame
construction was chosen with large pre-fabricated
beams of B.C. fir with walls and roof of cedar. The front
was almost a glass wall that fitted up into the high pointed
roof. Even though the windows in the glass wall were classified
as "insulated," heat passed through them easily to the outside.
The sanctuary end wall was 2 x 4 construction with 1" cedar
on both sides. There was no insulation in the wall, which
is still true in 1999. The only insulation in the ceiling
was provided by the 4" thick cedar roof boards and the layer of
cedar shingles on top. However, fuel oil and heating was inexpensive
at that time. The building was designed so that it could be extended
toward Fisher Avenue. The church was not considered completed
as first planned and built, but just a first stage.
Provision was made
for a basement and for a kitchen in a
corner of the basement, however it was left
for the parishioners to complete.
In order to cut costs,
they eliminated the drainage tile around
the basement wall, a decision that would come
back to haunt the decision makers quickly as
water in the spring or after a heavy rainfall would
seep into the basement. Even a sump pump could
not keep up with the heavy downfalls. It is still
a pain in 1999.
There were two washrooms
installed in the back of the basement
near the boiler room for which a sewage
charge was levied by the VLA. The charge originally
was $3 per toilet, but decreased to $2 when Ottawa
took over the water supply. The small charge generated
enormous paper work with a letter giving
the charge every quarter, a letter paying the bill with
a cheque, and another letter giving a receipt.
A St. Mark’s Church
Building Fund Canvas was held in May 1954.
The canvassers carried around to each parish
family the architect’s conception of the final
church and a floor plan. A model was made available
at a "CHURCH BY CHRISTMAS SUPPER" which was held
on May 31, 1954 at 6:00 P.M. The Canvass Committee
consisted of the Chairman, F.E. Richens, and members:
J.H. Morgan, D.C. West, L.M Baker, G.G.F. May, F.G.
Shipman, L.A. Gillespie, J.H. Chapman, L.J.C. Rule,
H.M. Genn, J.S. Kirby, O.W. Wier, A. Davis, C. Bassett,
E. Forde, A. Fraser, and A.W. MacKinnon.
When the plans were completed and
accepted by Parish and Diocese, bids
were requested. The winning bid was submitted
by F.E. Cummings Construction. The bid has been
recorded as $65,000 in many of the Parish documents,
which appears like a rounded value. A handwritten annotation
on one of the plans lists the winning bid as $64,810, which
is close to the amount recorded in the Ottawa newspapers
as $64,800. So in the end, the Parish borrowed $60,000. The
amount paid for architect and other building fees is not recorded
so the funds from the Parish must have been the remaining
$4,810 for the Contractor and enough other funds to cover
the architect and other fees.
It was time to think of sod turning.
To Commemorate
The Breaking of
the Ground
for the
Church of St. Mark's,
Carleton Heights, Ottawa
By the
VENERABLE C.G.HEPBURN,
Archdeacon of Ottawa
Wednesday, June 23rd,
1954 at 7:30pm
The Rev. A.E.O.Anderson,
BA, AKC, Rector
The Rev. R.V.A.Rogers, BA,
LTh, Assistant
R.T.Rump and L.M.Baker,
Church Wardens
John H.Morgan, Cahirman
of the Building Committee
Gilleland and Strutt,
Architects
F.E.Cummings, Building
Contractor
|
|
Drawing on a souvenir postcard
printed for the sod turning
in 1954
|
Archdeacon Hepburn
turning the first sod
with AEO on the right
The sod turning took place on June 23, 1954 by Archdeacon C.G.
Hepburn, as shown on the left in the
picture. From left to right, the others
are Bert Rump (Rector’s Warden), Laurie Baker (People’s
Warden), John Morgan (Chair of Building Committee),
Allan Rogers, Frank Richens (Chair of the Finance
Committee), and A.E.O. Anderson. Hidden from view
in this picture were Norm Moody, Chairman of the Church
Extension Commission and V.S. McClenaghan, Chancellor
of the Diocese.
The shovel in the photo was donated by Bert Rump.
It was painted aluminium colour to cover its
full history before becoming a ceremonial item.
Church in 1955
A 1955 photo shows the completed Church. Notice the front of
the Church. There is no link. There is a flat roofed porch or portico
in front of the Church. Notice as well there is no office or choir room.
On the inside of the Church there were no pews. The parishioners sat
on stacking chairs.
Allan
Rogers at Christmas Eve service
1954
note: Altar rail
Though there was still much to be done on the building, the
floors were still rough concrete, and there was no furniture, the eager
congregation celebrated their first service in the Church on
Christmas Eve, 1954, with Allan Rogers. The unfinished Sanctuary
was decorated with small
pine trees shimmering with foil icicles.
An Altar was constructed from packing cases and
many brought their own chairs. There were 186
at the Christmas Eve service with 124 communicants.
The donated reed organ was used, although the organist
is not recorded. It is fondly remembered in 1999 as
a joyous occasion. AEO took the Christmas Day service
the next day at 11:15 A.M. with 103 in attendance and
70 communicants.
After the Christmas Eve and Christmas
Day services, the congregation returned to
the Carleton Heights School to let the Contractor
finish the job.
It was business as usual for the Congregation
after they returned to Carleton Heights School.
Weekly leaflets continued to be written by
AEO , typed by Mrs. Dunbar of St. Peter’s, and run off
on a Mimeograph machine at St. Peter’s. The leaflet
on the Second Sunday after Epiphany in January 1955 gave
notice of the Annual Vestry to be held at the School, confirmation
classes, the purchase of a Viewlex film strip projector
for the Sunday School, and a note about the musical instrument
used at the Christmas Eve and Christmas Day services
at the Church. AEO wrote:
"Church
Harmonium - You will be interested
to know that the Harmonium which served us
so well in the Church for our Christmas Services was
the gift of Mrs. Dowler's (Audrey Dowler) parents,
Mr. and Mrs. F.H. Roy of Buckingham, P.Q. The harmonium
belonged to Mrs. Dowler’s grandparents originally
it was felt that they would be very happy to have the organ
in an Anglican Church."
A "harmonium" is another name for a reed organ. Bud Magee
remembers picking it up from the Perth area rather than Buckingham..
The organ was manufactured by Thomas Organ Co. of Woodstock, Ontario.
The Congregation returned to the Church to hold
the Vestry Meeting on January 31, 1995. That was the
first meeting held in the Church. The first Service
was on February 6, 1955. The Altar Guild was formed as
soon as the Congregation returned. Elsie Kempsey was
the first member as she had been involved since the beginning
in 1949. The other five founding members were Alta Montgomery,
Peggy Johnson, Marguerite Godin, and Dorothy Brigley.
Dorothy notes with pride that all except Marguerite
are alive today in 1999 - that says something about Altar
Guild duty. Susan Helen daughter of Jack & Pam Zoubie,
Karen Joan daughter of Jack & Estelle Reid,
and Philip Percy son of Fred & Phyllis Sorfleet
were baptised on February 20, 1955. These were the first
baptisms in the Church. The leaflet prepared by AEO Anderson
for Sexagesima or the Second Sunday before Lent (February
13, 1955) carried the following words, which must have
been written with both sadness and relief:
"Dedication of St. Marks - As you
know, February 24th, St. Matthias Day, is
to be the day of Dedication. That is a day to remember
from now on. Many Churches keep their Feast of Dedication
(when they know its date) as well as their Patronal
Festival (St. Mark's Day, April 25th). We are inviting
the Clergy of the Diocese, the Executive Committee
of the Diocese and the Extension Committee, all of which
have helped us in one way or another to build this Church
of which we are justly proud.
When St. Marks is dedicated, the particular work
which Bishop Jefferson asked me to do will have
been completed and my work here done. I will cease
then to be the Incumbent of St. Mark’s and will be
able to give my full energy to St. Peter’s which is developing
fast. I am not saying goodbye today, I am simply
making you aware of the change which will take place after
Feb. 24th. Mr Rogers will remain at St. Mark’s as Curate-in-Charge
under the Bishop. In this way there will be some continuity
with the past, during the early stages of the Parish
adapting itself to its Church and hal1."
The Church was dedicated on February 24, 1955 by Bishop Ernie
Reed. It was a packed Church with 285
in attendance. Along with Bishop Reed, the
Vestry Book records AEO Anderson, Douglas Christie,
Stephen Kenward, Eric Osborne, Bruce Black, E.A. Johnston,
J.C. Anderson, D.W. Thomson, Ralph Smith, and Allan Rogers.
Many distinguished guests, including Mayor Charlotte Whitton,
attended. Life was not all money and work. A note in
the March 31, 1955 Newsletter by Allan Rogers gives the following
information:
"The following day, Monday April
18th, Circle 2 is holding a square dance in
the Parish Hall. Tickets are available. The evening
costs about $1.25 per couple, which is very reasonable
indeed. Added to this is the fact that Mr. Jack Zoubie
is to be the Master of Ceremonies. These are two good
bids for the occasion’s popularity and success. Incidentally,
I understand the Bishop’s position in the matter of
dancing in the Parish Hall is that an informal party among
ourselves is acceptable. The other extreme, renting
the hall for dances, appeals neither to him nor to us."
Well how about that! In cash strapped years later not only would
it be rented for dances, but it was rented
out as well to pure drinking parties for
sports organizations. Incidentally, Jack Zoubie
was one of the pioneer square dance teachers in the
early 50s in Ottawa. He helped found the movement which
is still going today. He was well respected and well
loved by the square dancers of the area and his loss was
felt by everyone. He called in latter years many happy
square dances for the Marksmen. Jack was well ahead of his
time in what we would call ecumenism today. He was
very sad when the Interdenominational Church failed
and was replaced by separate churches.
It wasn’t long before the Harmonium,
or reed organ as it was generally known, was fitted
with a vacuum cleaner blower to replace the foot
pedal and an amplifier to give more sound by John
Chapman and a new outer case was built by John Perry
and John Morgan. Dr. John Chapman was the father of the
Canadian Space program and a very active parishioner.
Enjoy the words of John Chapman in the June 20th, 1955
edition of a quarterly bulletin.
The reed organ in 1999
"The organ for our new Church
was not forgotten by the Building Committee
when plans were being laid for building, about a
year ago. Gradually it became evident that the $1,500.00
to $2,500.00 needed for a suitable electronic organ
were not going to be available after the Building itself
was provided. Hence several members of the Committee and
one parishioner, rather diffidently suggested that an
electronic organ might be built, using as a basis a
reed organ given to St. Mark’s some years ago. As always,
the amount of work needed to effect the conversion was
underestimated and the task has taken much longer than anticipated.
Such is usually the case with amateur organ builders.
The
design of the amplifier, and electronic techniques
used, are taken from a commercial organ, which
shall be un-named in case of a feeling of jealousy on
the part of the manufacturer. A vacuum-cleaner motor
(donated) replaces the knee-action air supply. A collection
of tubes, transformers, resistors, and condensers
from three basements, and a few dollars worth of new components
has been combined into an amplifier. After much head scratching,
and application of cut-and-try methods, the whole organ has
reached the stage of producing electronic music. The final stages
of assembly are now in process, tuning is complete, and the
cabinet is being refinished to harmonize with the Church interior.
In a few weeks we shall be able to judge how successful
the attempt to build an electronic organ has been.
This
particular type of instrument is relatively easy
to play and has a much purer tone than the reed organ
from which it is derived. It is, however, not nearly
as versatile as the Hammond organ or the epitome
of Church organs, a full pipe organ. The three amateur
organ builders are wondering now if the task of building
a full pipe organ, using a very fine console, which has been
given to St. Mark's, is beyond their abilities, and the patience
of their wives."
The Editor of the Bulletin added:
"Editor’s Note: Thank you,
Mr. Chapman, Mr. Perry, and others who have
given of your particular ability in this field.
Wives. Love your husbands and admire their endeavours."
The plans for the conversion were taken from articles in Electronics
for Communications by Markus &
Zeluff (no year shown on the Archives copy) and
Radio-Craft for April 1941 by W.K. Allan. Essentially,
a bolt was placed with the tip close to each reed
so that when the reed vibrated, contact was made with
the screw tip, which in turn was used to control the controlling
grid of a tube. Each reed was constructed to vibrate
at a specific frequency to produce the required note.
For the power amplifier stage, John used a 20 watt Heathkit
amplifier. He hand wound the coil to control the swell pedal
through a 6H6 tube amplifier.
John Perry and John Morgan did an excellent
job on the outer case using leftover cedar. It
must have looked right at home in the Church.
And one more item from that Bulletin about the Strawberry
Festival which had been a fund raising part of St. Mark’s since the
beginning. It gives a flavour of the work that was going on to make
the Church the centre of the community.
"Again this year, Mr. Doug.
Baker is the general Convenor of the Strawberry
Festival. It will be held June 25th, from 3:00 to
6:00 p.m. in the Parish Hall and on the Church grounds.
Tickets are only 35 cents and children who sell 10 get a
free ticket. A mammoth bake sale will be the attraction, and
donations are solicited from each household. The members
of the Guild are asked for four items for the bake table.
They plan on bread, buns, pies, cakes, cookies, salads of all
sorts, cold meats, etc. Norma Grand, the food Convener, is willing
to have anyone 'phone her (3-2624) for specific information
or donations. The girls hope, of course, for a very large bake
sale since they are not having candy or bazaar materials (drygoods).
A good bake sale sounds like an excellent accompaniment to a
strawberry festival.
The Men's
Fellowship will try to entertain the children with
games of many sorts, pony rides, fish pond, etc. Something
new has been added: Mr. Turnbull plans a demonstration
and sale of plastics. Mr. Fillman is planning a NEW-TO-YOU
table. Good but outgrown summer wear, clean and attractive,
are solicited from any source. Other saleable new-to-you
items-are going to be on hand too. Just bring any contributions
with you, or contact Joe Savill, Art Fillman or George
Sparling. We watch this event with interest.
The choir
has a scheme of sales too, and perhaps the potential
AYPA may have a plan. From some source there are
rumours of hot-dogs and freshly popped corn.
Added
Attraction - There will be a chocolate bar man just
loaded with free chocolate bars, one each for Church
School and pre-Church School members of St. Mark's Church.
The quantity is limited to one per child as long as the
bars last, but we have a fair supply too. Somehow, we just
knew the children would love this "bar" story.
Punch
Line - Sorry, don't get confused. We are merely
drawing to the conclusion of the Strawberry Festival
news. Anyway, all of this sounds just like the affair
one would not think of missing. Plan now to attend --
to take your part in it. Invite all your friends of Church
and State and make this the biggest and best Strawberry
Festival ever."
Font
in 1999
The parishioners, interested clergy, and churches in the Diocese
wasted no time in helping to furnish the
new building. Les McCrum could lay his hands on
a big truck. There was no end of volunteers and the
general principal was "You call; We haul." Bud Magee recalls
many trips in the back of the truck (try that in 1999) with
Fred Shipman, Ewart Forde, Jack Reid, Godfrey (Benny)
Goodman, and others.
Among the gifts were the Altar rail that came from
St Matthias’ Church on Fairmont Ave, before they moved
to Parkdale. It was in place for the Christmas Eve
service in 1954 and is clearly visible in photographs
taken at the service. The rail is still in use in the Church
in 1999.
The
white marble baptismal font has an interesting history
and background. The font is one of many in the Diocese
that are still in active use. By the way, it is
another of the things brought to the Church in 1955 by
the St. Mark’s "You call, We Haul" crew, as it had been in
storage at St. Thomas’ Church.
Sheila Vaudrey presented the following on Easter Day, April 2,
1997.
"In the mid 1870s, just after the Confederation
of Canada, most of Ontario suffered a brief economic
depression until the early 1890s. Immediately
after, when things started to boom again, many new churches
were built to meet the growing population's demands. This
was when Ottawa was a fraction of its current size and
still an Archdeaconry within the Diocese of Ontario, rather
than a diocese unto itself.
In 1889
a dispute over liturgy in St. George's on Metcalfe
Street led to a breakaway of only 30 people forming
the new parish of Grace Church, which was built in
1891 at Elgin and Somerset. For a small parish, it
soon produced an extremely active children's ministry, known
as the Children's Church Missionary Guild, a junior
version of the Women's Auxiliary. This guild had been inaugurated
in Ottawa in 1889; by 1893 the membership at Grace Church
was 40, the largest in Ottawa at that time. Its purpose
was to interest children in working for the missionary cause
of Jesus Christ, primarily by collections and crafts to
raise funds for needy missions. It was led by one superintendent
of the Women's Auxiliary and 3 officers elected by the children
themselves, and its motto was "Serving the Lord."
In 1912
St. John the Evangelist on Rideau Street at Sussex
was completely destroyed by fire. After much debate
the parish amalgamated with Grace Church, taking the
name St. John the Evangelist. The identity of Grace
Church was gone . . . and yet, it has left its legacy behind.
For most of its brief history, the Children's Guild at Grace
Church had been so successful in missionary fund-raising
that, along with St. Alban's, Ottawa, they were able to present
the gift of a font to a new parish almost every year. Grace
Church gave fonts to St. Mary's, Calabogie, and to St. Alban's,
Mattawa, in 1890 alone, one to St. Margaret's, Rutherglen
near North Bay in 1892, one to St. John the Baptist, Pierces'
Corners near North Gower, in 1893, one to St. Matthias, Ottawa,
in 1894 (then on Wellington Street), and one to St. Andrew's,
Sharbot Lake, in 1895. These fonts were of native white marble,
about three feet high and of simple yet elegant design, each
bearing the invocation "Suffer the little children to come unto
Me," and the inscription "CCMG, Grace Church, Ottawa" and the presentation
date. By Anglican tradition they were octagonal in shape, symbolizing
the eighth day of creation - the new creation through the
resurrection of Christ; and also by tradition, they were presented
at Eastertide. A solid marble font in those days and at those
prices cost about $35. In March of 1897, a font was given
by Grace Church to the Rev. F. Ritchie, pastor of the Church
of the Good Shepherd in Plantagenet near Hawksbury. It had been
founded in 1860, built by 1875, and finally consecrated in 1896.
The first baptism with this new font was held in June 1897; the last
on record in July 1916, at which point the congregation had dwindled
to three families: a total of 10 parishioners. The church itself
was taken down in 1922, and its vessels and furniture placed
in cold storage, divided between the basement of St. Thomas’
Ellwood and St. George's, Hawthorne, both parts of one Parish.
History
has a curious way of repeating itself. A second
depression in the 1930s, followed by World War II,
suspended construction on new churches or much else
for that matter. At war's end veterans flooded into
Ottawa, and a fresh boom of church-building erupted, especially
around the Carleton Heights area. The incumbent of
St. Thomas, the Rev. Robert Shannon, offered up any of
the artifacts which had been stored and forgotten for thirty
years to a new mission that had spun out of St. Peter's,
and to which he had been appointed: a new parish that was
in the process of building its own church structure at this
time. St. George's also provided several pieces, among them
a certain brass cross and an ornate set of candlesticks .
. . but it was St. Thomas who unveiled the white marble font."
As well as gifts from other Churches, the talented members
of St. Mark’s made many items themselves in 1955. These were labours
of love and were accepted as such: an
altar was made by John Morgan out of leftover
cedar; a Clergy pew was made by John Morgan and John Perry;
a coat rack was made by John Perry and Bert Rump out of leftover
cedar; and a Processional Cross was made by John Perry.
John Perry made the aluminum tube lights that hung from the ceiling.
Kitchen cupboards were built by Emile Godin and Warren Watkinson
in the basement corner kitchen. All in all, a very busy year.
But what a glorious time in the life of the Parish!
Under the heading of the "good old days", the eight pages printed
both sides of four sheets Parish Newsletter
was mailed out on September 9, 1955 to all parishioners
for 2 cents. It was also just folded in three
and stapled in one corner. That would cost 46 cents in
1999 and would require an envelope, or 92 cents
without an envelope.
Allan Rogers returned to the Parish of Bearbrook in October 1955
and was replaced by George Foy who came
to the Parish in November 1955 from the Diocese
of Moosonee. In addition to St. Mark’s, George was
assigned the historic Parish of St. John the Divine in the
Merivale-Slack Rd area.
The first wedding in the Church was on June 2, 1956. Joan Kempsey
and Don Wilson were the bride and groom.
Joan is the daughter of Emil and Elsie Kempsey
as well the first president of the Anglican Young Peoples’
Association or AYPA.
A note in the weekly leaflet for January 27, 1957 (Epiphany III)
gave more positive news about the health
of the Parish:
"St. Mark's Seventh Annua1 Vestry
Meeting is now history. The meeting held Friday
Evening in the Church Hall, was well attended (55 parishioners
signed the register) and will be remembered as the occasion
on which St. Mark’s Parish shed the shackles of infancy
to become full-grown by the unanimous decision of the
vestry to become self-supporting effective January 1st,
1957."
The decision to be self-supporting allowed George Foy, finally,
to be inducted as Rector on February 10,
1957.
On March 4,
1957 the 72nd Ottawa Scout Group was granted a charter.
George May, the first Cubmaster, recalls trying for
the even number of "70", but it was gone. So the 72nd
was born. It was boom time for kids and soon the Group was
filled to capacity.
In an act
of great faith and at the urging of the Bishop, the
building of a Rectory at the rear of the Church on Normandy
Crescent was begun in 1957. Laurie Baker years later still
talked of it as a miracle.
Front of Rectory in 1961
John Chapman, as People’s Warden, was heavily involved and kept
good notes. He polled the Council to
see whether a split level or two storey was preferred.
There were strong views both ways, but in the end
Eleanor Foy carried the day. Because the Rectory would
be used for meetings, and because she thought the meetings
would go late, she did not want any design that would not
give her some privacy once she had retired. So a two storey
house was built. That was good thinking. The design has
proven very practical. In another bit of good thinking,
John Chapman reasoned that the planned garage would be much more
useful as a study/meeting room rather than a garage. With
the Church and Hall in full use, the only space available was
the Rectory. It is still a well used part of the Rectory today.
The Central
Mortgage & Housing Corporation (CMHC, a Federal
Government Crown Corporation) application
was signed by John Chapman, Laurie Baker, and George
Foy on April 27, 1957. It was approved by CMHC April
30, 1957. Tenders were called and James Taylor Construction
won. Taylor was building the houses in Copeland Park
at the time and his pricing was very good. According to
Joy Bowerman who lived in one for a few years, Taylor houses
are still known today as well constructed houses. The completion
date was September 1, 1957. George Foy and his family who
had been living on 1418 Laperriere St moved into the Rectory as
soon as it was completed. A National Housing Authority (NHA)
mortgage of $13,050 at 6% was taken in 1958 with the Toronto-Dominion
Bank.
The Photo
Directory in 1993 records that on Grey Cup Day in
1957 some men of the Parish went to the Seaway area to
pick up 26 pine pews which came from a church in Finch that
had been torn down to make room for the Seaway. The Memorial
Book records that there were 23 purchased and that they originally
came to the Finch church from St. Matthias’ Church on Fairmont
Avenue. The tip that these were available came from Ben Bickford.
The pews were purchased from Ontario Hydro for a cost to $150
and had been stored in a deserted schoolhouse with broken windows,
which of course made a good home for pigeons. When the pews arrived,
the ladies had a considerable cleaning task to do. The pews were installed
along with 10 oak pews that had been given to St. Mark’s from a closed
Church in Alfred. In 1999 there are 24 of these original pine pews
left so the value of 26 would seem the right one. Of the 10 oak
pews, 5 oak pews are still in use as Choir pews. For the sentimentally
inclined, there must have been a joyous reunion of the altar rail
and the pine pews, both of which came from St. Matthias on Fairmont
Avenue.
Parking lot built in rear in 1958.
Entrance off
Fisher south of Church
In 1958 over 500 loads of fill were donated to the Church from
the construction of Baseline Rd. Bert Rump always had his ear to the ground
and when he heard about the widening and the fill, he took action. The fill
was levelled by volunteers (that’s us) and became the first parking lot extending
from the rear of the Church towards the Rectory.
Every once in a while a piece of this fills comes
to the surface to remind us of Bert Rump and his tremendous
work for the Church in the early days. Bert didn’t drive
and he smoked cigars. So whenever someone picked him up to
take him somewhere, they had to be prepared for heavy cigar
smoke which lingered in the car for days.
Treeless view of St. Mark's from Fisher and
Normandy in 1957.
Photo by Edna
Harwood.
(her Mom is working
in the garden)
The Financial Statement for the year ending December 31, 1958
showed Open as $788.50, Current as $10,016.03, and total income of $17,209.34.
Expenses were $16,893.29.
The Church in
1955 and the Rectory in 1957 should have been the
end of the building for a while. But as noted earlier, there
was tremendous growth going on in the area. The population
doubled in a few short years and doubled again, and again.
Even the building of St. Richard’s on Merivale Road was not
enough to handle new Anglicans in the area. George Foy went
to the assessment rolls and added all the listed Anglicans to
the Parish List and it grew to over 600. Sunday schools were full
to overflowing, but as luck would have it, arrangements were made
with St. Rita’s School to hold the Sunday School there. Just as well
because there were over 200 children in Sunday School at that
time and the Church could only hold about 200.
Leaflet cover graphic showing Sanctuary
with Casavant pipe
box on the left
The modified reed organ could not keep up with the demands
of the organists and choir. It was just too
limited. Someone heard about a two manual electro-pneumatic
organ from Casavant Frères in Ste. Hyacinthe which
was used as a demonstrator at Canadian National Exhibition
in Toronto. George Foy, the Organist (no agreement on
who it was today), John Chapman, and John Kirby drove
to the factory to look at the instrument. It was a bargain
at $10,000. They arranged for purchase and it was installed
in 1962. The console was installed on the north side
of the chancel and the pipes on the south side. Electrical
wires connected the two so that when a key was pressed, a signal
was sent to a solenoid in the pipe box, the pipe was opened, and
the note sounded. It worked and was a great step forward over the
reed organ. The new organ was dedicated Sunday, September 9, 1962
to the memory of those who gave their lives in two World Wars. The
old reed organ finally ended up in parishioner Jenny Morphew’s
home, where it still makes music in 1999.
In 1963 St John the Divine was split from St. Mark’s to allow
George Foy more time with St. Mark’s. With
four services a day, the Basement Hall being used every
night of the week by the Scouts, Guides, Cubs, and
Brownies, the Church had reached it capacity.
At the end of Chapter
4 a list of the Wardens and Treasurers has been
included for the years 1955 to 1965.
Written by Lorne Bowerman
with help from
Dorothy Brigley, Bud
Magee, Marion Chapman, John Morgan and many others
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