MacKay United Church - Ottawa, Ontario
Posted by: Weathervane
N 45° 26.418 W 075° 40.973
18T E 446592 N 5032090
Formerly known as MacKay Presbyterian, this Church became MacKay United Church in 1925 when it joined with the Methodist, Congregationalist and a few smaller churches. The church is located at 39 Dufferin Road, in Ottawa, Ontario.
Waymark Code: WM1306M
Location: Ontario, Canada
Date Posted: 08/18/2020
Views: 3
Inscription on a plaque on the front of the church:
MacKay United Church
Founded as New Edinburgh
Presbyterian Church in 1875, the church
became Mackay Presbyterian in 1901 and,
upon church union in 1925, MacKay United
Church, the present church, built in
1909-1910 to replace an earlier structure,
was designed by architect H.F. Ballantyne.
Its prominent corner location and handsome
Romanesque revival details such as the
triple arched entrance portal and round-
headed windows make it a significant
landmark.
"MacKay United Church of New Edinburgh has a long, fascinating history closely intertwined with the development of the nation’s capital. The MacKay name comes from one of Ottawa’s prominent citizens of the early 1800’s, Thomas McKay, a staunch Presbyterian Scotsman and stone mason. He came to Ottawa in 1826 to help Colonel John By construct the first eight locks of the Rideau Canal and when the locks were complete, bought a thousand acres of land straddling the Rideau River near its junction with the Ottawa River. Thomas McKay made many contributions to his adopted community. He built St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church in Ottawa in 1828 and in 1830 established the village of New Edinburgh on his property on the east side of the Rideau River. Initially, New Edinburgh residents travelled to St. Andrew’s in the centre of Ottawa for worship and the earliest record of Church activities in New Edinburgh is Thomas McKay teaching Sunday School in a hall at the corner of Alexander and Charles Streets in 1845."
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