Difference between revisions of "Sackville Meeting Room, NB"
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| − | The [[Sackville Meeting Room, NB|Sackville Meeting Room]] was an assembly that existed in Sackville, New Brunswick from at least 1894 thru at least 1985. | + | The [[Sackville Meeting Room, NB|Sackville Meeting Room]] was an assembly that existed in Sackville, New Brunswick from at least 1894 thru at least 1985. Originally an Exclusive brethren meeting, and in 1909 it affiliated itself with the Tunbridge Wells split, and if it still existed in 2016, it would be with the Nepean division of 1992. |
| − | The earliest correspondent was [[John A. Hammond]] (1843-1939), an artist with roots Montreal, Quebec who was introduced to the Brethren while chasing a gold rush in New Zealand in 1866, and whose brother and nephew were subsequently in leadership at Natural History Hall. John served this assembly from 1894 thru at least 1927, but likely until his death in 1939. | + | The earliest correspondent was [[John A. Hammond]] (1843-1939), an artist with roots Montreal, Quebec who was introduced to the Brethren while chasing a gold rush in New Zealand in 1866, and whose brother and nephew were subsequently in leadership at Natural History Hall. John served this assembly from 1894 thru at least 1927, but likely until his death in 1939. He was also a professor at |
Other correspondents have included: | Other correspondents have included: | ||
| − | * [[Arthur Rainsford Dixon]] (1867-1944) 1908-1944 | + | * [[Arthur Rainsford Dixon]] (1867-1944) 1908-1944 |
| − | * Arthur | + | ** Head of the Fine Arts Dept @ Mount Allison University |
| − | * James R. Irvine 1973 | + | * [[Arthur Leonard Hemmings]] (1914-2005) 1962-1985 |
| + | * James R. Irvine 1973<br /> | ||
| + | ** possibly a retired Anglican Canon in Fredericton, NB | ||
* Dan Hopkins 1985-2016+ | * Dan Hopkins 1985-2016+ | ||
Revision as of 13:52, 3 May 2020
The Sackville Meeting Room was an assembly that existed in Sackville, New Brunswick from at least 1894 thru at least 1985. Originally an Exclusive brethren meeting, and in 1909 it affiliated itself with the Tunbridge Wells split, and if it still existed in 2016, it would be with the Nepean division of 1992.
The earliest correspondent was John A. Hammond (1843-1939), an artist with roots Montreal, Quebec who was introduced to the Brethren while chasing a gold rush in New Zealand in 1866, and whose brother and nephew were subsequently in leadership at Natural History Hall. John served this assembly from 1894 thru at least 1927, but likely until his death in 1939. He was also a professor at
Other correspondents have included:
- Arthur Rainsford Dixon (1867-1944) 1908-1944
- Head of the Fine Arts Dept @ Mount Allison University
- Arthur Leonard Hemmings (1914-2005) 1962-1985
- James R. Irvine 1973
- possibly a retired Anglican Canon in Fredericton, NB
- Dan Hopkins 1985-2016+