Hillsborough United Church - Hillsborough, NB
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member T0SHEA
N 45° 55.160 W 064° 38.609
20T E 372557 N 5086398
Built in 1862, this church was the place of worship of the Methodists of the Hillsborough area for 63 years, until becoming a United Church.
Waymark Code: WMR0HF
Location: New Brunswick, Canada
Date Posted: 04/23/2016
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member lumbricus
Views: 2

As we all know by now, on June 10th of 1925 the congregations of the Methodist Church joined with the Congregational Church and the Presbyterian Church to form the United Church of Canada. This church was built by predominantly German speaking immigrants who previously had worshipped in an Acadian Roman Catholic meeting house in the burying ground used by the Acadian people prior to 1755. The first Methodist minister to arrive in the area was Bishop William Black, from Amherst, who began preaching to the Methodists in that meeting house in 1781. It wasn't until 1862 that the Methodists built this church, which is still in use today as a United Church.

I've always found churches with widow's walk steeples such as this one interesting, possibly because they are rare or non-existent in our neck of the woods. The widow's walk, in Maritime areas, actually served a purpose. They were generally atop tall buildings, allowing persons awaiting the arrival of a ship to see out to sea and, hopefully, spy the ship as it was arriving. Many widow's walks, however, may have been placed atop churches purely as architectural statements, never intending to be used. This widow's walk, like the majority we've encountered in the Maritimes, is punctuated with a small spire at each corner. That seems to be the norm. Each spire is topped with a weather vane - triple redundancy for accuracy.
Photo goes Here Photo goes Here
Photo goes Here Photo goes Here
Hillsborough United Church
DESCRIPTION OF HISTORIC PLACE
The Hillsborough United Church is a rural two-storey Gothic Revival church building from the mid-19th century and is located on Main Street in Hillsborough. For Christians, faith and hope are enduring mainstays of their belief. In many churches, such as Hillsborough United church, this faith is symbolized in the architecture by soaring steeples reaching toward heaven. On this building, the square-topped belfry with balustrade is transformed into a larger scaled version of the widow’s walk atop the neighbouring house on Main Street.

HERITAGE VALUE
The Hillsborough United Church is of historic significance as an enduring landmark erected by the village’s forbearers as they struggled to insure their spiritual well-being.

Even though physical survival was a constant struggle for the early settlers in Hillsborough, they considered the preservation of their souls to be of paramount importance. Their beliefs, founded in faraway lands, surrounded and nurtured by a congregation of likeminded people, proved strong enough to survive the loneliness, cold and backbreaking toil of frontier life. One of the hardships the settlers endured was the absence of ordained clergy living amongst them. For Methodists, who were required to follow an organized study of the scriptures, this lack of spiritual leadership was most troublesome. In 1781 an Apostle of Methodism, Bishop William Black from Amherst preached to the German settlers in Hillsborough. During his infrequent return visits to the village, he held meetings in the common meeting house that stood on the northern border of the burying ground used by the Acadian people prior to 1755. By 1862 the Methodists felt confident enough to move to Surrey and build their own church. Mr. Amos Bliss donated the land for the church and parsonage. Captain William Irving was a strong advocate of the church and became one of the first trustees of the new church.

The Hillsborough United Church is also recognized for being a good example of mid-19th century Gothic Revival religious architecture. This style is evident in the form and massing of the overall structure, the use of Gothic arch windows and the square central bell tower that sits atop the gable of the front façade. A flat widow’s walk was used instead of the more traditional spire. Widow’s walks were flattened areas on roof tops with a view seaward, where family members waited in hope and prayer, for the sight of loved ones safely delivered home from sea, a fitting feature for this coastal village. The church building has changed little during the past one hundred and forty-eight years. The placement of a full basement under the building in 1996 allowed for expanded worship activities and church suppers. The most significant structural change was not to the building, but to the church’s organization. In 1925 the Methodist Church joined with the Congregational Church and the Presbyterian Church to form the United Church of Canada.

CHARACTER-DEFINING ELEMENTS
- rectangular two-storey massing;
- moderately pitched end-gable roof;
- square bell tower at the gable end of the front façade;
- bell tower balustrade (widow’s walk) has a spire at each corner;
- tall narrow lancet venting on bell tower;
- returned eaves;
- tall narrow lancet windows with label moulding and Gothic tracery;
- pilaster corner boards with plain capitals;
- portico with round pillars on either side and topped by a pediment;
- double door entrance;
- cement foundation;
- cement steps with wrought iron railings fashioned to reflect the shape of the building’s windows;
- clapboard sheathing;
- interior spartial arrangement, woodwork and adornments.
From Historic Places Canada
Address of Tower:
2891 Main Street
Hillsborough, NB Canada
E4H 2X8


Still Operational: yes

Number of bells in tower?: 1

Relevant website?: [Web Link]

Rate tower:

Tours or visits allowed in tower?: Unknown

Visit Instructions:
Please post an original picture of the tower taken while you were there. Please also record how you came to be at this tower and any other interesting information you learned about it while there.
Search for...
Geocaching.com Google Map
Google Maps
MapQuest
Bing Maps
Nearest Waymarks
Nearest Bell Towers
Nearest Geocaches
Create a scavenger hunt using this waymark as the center point
Recent Visits/Logs:
Date Logged Log  
lesden visited Hillsborough United Church - Hillsborough, NB 08/28/2022 lesden visited it