Methodist Indian Mission
N 46° 29.127 W 084° 18.166
16T E 707014 N 5151521
In a park on east side of the road. Need to park on the road.
Waymark Code: WMXYPW
Location: Michigan, United States
Date Posted: 03/18/2018
Views: 4
Several Methodist ministers were active in missionary work in the "Soo" area in the 1830s. John Sunday, an Indian preacher from Canada, began missionary work in the Indian settlement at the Sault Ste. Marie Rapids around 1831. The Reverend John Clark followed in his steps two years later. Then in 1833, Peter Marksman, son of an Indian medicine man, was converted to Christianity and later became an esteemed minister of the Detroit Annual Conference. By 1834, the school had thirty-five students, and three "Methodist classes" were organized with forty Indians and nineteen whites. The Michigan Conference sent William H. Brockway to the mission as superintendent in 1839. He remained for ten years, serving most of that time as chaplain for Old Fort Brady.
John H. Pitezel and John Kah-beege continued the ministerial work at this settlement having come to the "Soo" in 1843 Pitezel arrived at what was a flourishing school and a farm with nearly fifty cultivated acres of land. He served as superintendent of the Methodist Indian District from 1848 to 1852, with missions as far away as Minnesota. A mission house was built in 1849 at Naomikong on Whitefish Bay. Little Rapids had been the focal point of the mission, for here were the farm, mission house, chapel and needed supplies. As more white settlers came to the "Soo" in the 1850s, many of the Indians moved away. By 1861, Methodist mission work in the area was concentrated at Iroquois Point near Sault St. Marie. The Methodists sold the mission land here in 1862
Parking nearby?: yes
D/T ratings:
Registered Site #: L0633
Historical Date: Not listed
Historical Name: Not listed
Description: Not listed
website: Not listed
|
Visit Instructions:Take a photo of your GPS at the marker. We'd prefer a photo of you with your GPS, but we realize that sometimes that's just not possible or preferable.
Also include a bit about your visit to the marker.
NEW: Instructions for logging Missing Marker Visits.
If the Marker is missing, but still listed here, you must provide a photo of you at the actual item historically honored. (This should be the waymark's "default" image). Indicate in your log that you took your photo at the Historical Location instead of the marker, because the marker was missing. Please also still include a bit about your visit to the site.