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St. Andrew's Church (Quebec City)

St. Andrew's Church
St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church Quebec City.jpg
St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church on rue Sainte-Anne in the Upper Town of Old Quebec.
St. Andrew's Church is located in Quebec City
St. Andrew's Church
St. Andrew's Church
Location of St. Andrew's Church in Quebec City
46°48′46.67″N 71°12′34.78″W / 46.8129639°N 71.2096611°W / 46.8129639; -71.2096611Coordinates: 46°48′46.67″N 71°12′34.78″W / 46.8129639°N 71.2096611°W / 46.8129639; -71.2096611
Location 106, rue Sainte-Anne
Quebec City, Quebec
G1R 3X8
Country Canada
Denomination Presbyterian
Website www.standrewsquebec.ca
History
Founded 1759
Founder(s) Reverend Robert MacPherson
Dedication Andrew the Apostle
Dedicated 30 November 1810 (1810-11-30)
Architecture
Status Church
Functional status Active
Architect(s) John Bryson
Groundbreaking 1809
Completed 1810
Construction cost £1,500
Specifications
Capacity 600
Administration
Presbytery Presbytery of Quebec
Synod Synod of Quebec and Eastern Ontario
Clergy
Minister(s) Reverend Katherine Burgess

St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church, Quebec City is a Presbyterian Church in Canada congregation in the Upper Town of Quebec City.

The congregation's roots began with the British conquest of Quebec at the Plains of Abraham in 1759. Under the leadership of Church of Scotland Chaplain Robert MacPherson and soldiers of the famous 78th Fraser Highlanders of James Wolfe's Army in 1759. A congregation evolved under his leadership, until his death in 1765. He was succeeded by another former Chaplain, George Henry.

With the 1763 Treaty, and the coming of merchants from Scotland and New England, the congregation soon assumed civilian status and was known as the Scotch Congregation - in connection with the Church of Scotland.

During the 1802 ministry of Alexander Spark, in response to a petition signed by 148 persons, the present Church site was granted by His Majesty George III, although it was not until 1807 that construction began.

The long-contemplated Church was dedicated on November 30, 1810, on St. Andrew's Day, and appropriately named after the apostle. The building remains virtually unchanged but for the addition of the Vestry in 1900.

On the same triangular site with the church are the Kirk Hall, first erected in 1829 as a Protestant School which continued as a flourishing scholastic institution for many years; and the magnificent Manse erected in 1837, which has been the residence of the ministers to the present time. William Reed was notably the church's organist from 1900-1913.

The Friends of St. Andrew's group was recently founded by the church congregation to assist in raising funds to keep this historic congregation operating.


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