Rev. Gordon C. Pringle, Minister at Kincardine, New Brunswick

Rev. Gordon Campbell Pringle

Obituary (part one) and (part two) transcription:

(Newspaper Headline:)

Rev. G. C. Pringle dies in Moncton, Had Served as minister at Kincardine for 56 years Kincardine

May 22 [1952] (Special) -The death of Rev. Gordon Campbell Pringle, Kincardine, occurred at the Moncton City Hospital at midnight Wednesday, on the 60th anniversary of his arrival in Canada. Mr. Pringle was born in Edinburgh, Scotland, Feb. 14, 1865, son of Rev. John and Mary (Montgomery) Pringle. He was educated at George Watson College, University of Edinburgh and the Church of Scotland Divinity Hall.

He spent three years at sheep ranching in Australia and New Zealand before being licensed to preach April 27, 1892, at Ellon, Aberdeenshire. In 1933 he received the honorary degree of doctor of divinity from Pine Hill Divinity Hall, Halifax.

He arrived in Canada May 21, 1892, and the next day preached in the First Presbyterian Church, Truro. For three months he did pastoral work in Hampton, and then spent three months at Lorneville. He was ordained Sept. 7, 1892, in the Old Calvin Presbyterian Church, Saint John. After serving at Lorneville for three years, Mr. Pringle was inducted as minister of Kincardine Presbyterian Church and remained as pastor of this church up to the time of his death–a 56-year period without a break.

In 1898 he married Hattie LePage who died in 1909. Mrs. Pringle was the daughter of the late Rev. and Mrs. A. E. LePage. Mr. Pringle visited his home in Scotland in 1903 and again in 1910. He kept detailed records of his congregation and of the happenings in the community.

Surviving are one son, Rev. Gordon C. Pringle, pastor of the Berwick, N. S., United Church; four daughters, Mrs. C. M. Robinson, Montreal; Mrs. R. Harris Chapman, Moncton; Mrs. Harold V. Colpitts, Lewisville, and Miss Hattie Pringle, Moncton.

The funeral service, under the direction of the Woodstock Presbytery, will be held Saturday afternoon at 2p’clock . . . Interment will be in . . . church cemetery at Kincardine.(a corner is cut off from the photograph)

Published in: on May 2, 2012 at 1:06 pm  Leave a Comment  
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Burns Night 2012

The Scotch Colony in Kincardine, New Brunswick held its annual Burns Night Concert at Burns Hall this past weekend. Two performances were held. A snow storm forced the postponement of Friday evening’s show to Saturday night at 8 PM and concluded with a dance. A matinee was held on Sunday afternoon at 2:00 PM, followed by a tea which included oatcakes, cheese, sandwiches, and shortbread. Both events were well attended and a grand time was had by all.

"Friends and Family Choir" performing at the Burns concert on Sunday afternoon at Burns Hall

Burns Night has been a tradition in the Scotch Colony since it was settled in 1873. Some of the earliest celebrations were held in the Kincardine one-room school. In 1911 the current Burns Hall was built by John McBeath Ellis after a fire destroyed the previous hall. Ellis arrived in the Colony as a child with his parents in 1873 aboard the Castalia.

1911 John Ellis, builder of Burns Hall, Kincardine, New Brunswick

Burns Hall has recently been refurbished by the people of the Colony. Much hard work has been lovingly done to update the building and its furnishings. Even the sign on the outside of the hall has been repainted by the original builder’s daughter, Kathleen Ellis Morton, now age 93 and the painter of the original sign when she was a young girl.

Watch for a new CD of the talented musicians that perform on Burns Night in the Colony. A live recording was made this weekend and will be followed by a second recording in January 2013 at the next Burns Night. The new CD will be available in time for the 140th anniversary celebration in the summer 2013.

Published in: on January 30, 2012 at 1:19 pm  Leave a Comment  
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The Settling of the Scotch Colony

The Tobique Valley Genealogy and Local History Group of Plaster Rock, New Brunswick, Canada has much of interest to folks with connections to the Scotch Colony.  Dedicated individuals have done the hard work of recording cemetary records and making the data available on their website.

Another nugget on the Tobique Valley website is a newspaper clipping which describes the beginnings of the Scotch Colony. The photograph of the article is very valuable and interesting reading. Here is the transcription which readers may find easier to read.

The Settling of the Scotch Colony

By Chris Allen

http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~nbtvglhg/settling_scotch_colony.jpg

The settling of the Scotch Colony in Victoria County by families from Aberdeenshire and Kindardineshire, Scotland, was in large part an exercise in faith and personal fortitude. Most of those who emigrated to New Brunswick were fairly well educated and had skills and trades which provided the families with a decent livelihood, although by no means were they well off. The Scots people had cultural and family ties that went back hundreds of years, they were proud of their heritage and strongly united in religious beliefs.

At that time, in the late 19th century, life in Kincardineshire, as elsewhere, was lived at a much slower pace than in our modern day. People were secure in their social positions, and they knew what to expect from life. However, the aristocratic “lairds” (lords) in each parish owned all the property and most people had to work under the laird’s directions.

Working for the lairds also meant that people would never change their situation. But that was not a concern for people—it was just how life was—until the Scots became inspired by the idea of owning their own land and obtaining it for free in far away New Brunswick.

There was a lot to lose by their emigration to Canada, but they figured they could bring the good qualities of their Scottish culture and transplant it to a Scotch colony provided only people of good character partook in the emigration to New Brunswick.

Their way had been organized and prepared by a Captain William Brown of the Anchor Line of steamers from Stonehaven, Scotland. Capt. Brown had negotiated with the New Brunswick government for a block of land large enough for 50 families with provisions made to build roads, clear two acres of land and erect a cabin for each family who wanted one.

In April 1873, 545 Scots sailed from Glasgow, Scotland, on the steamer S. S. Castalia for Saint John. It was a difficult farewell for the people as they left family member, friends, and their secure way of life behind in Scotland. All they had to carry them into the unknown was their dreams of being masters of their own domain and their religious faith. By these, they would be guided safely through whatever was encountered.

The S. S. Castalia landed in Saint John in May after a rough voyage. The colonists embarked aboard smaller boats to sail up the St. John River to Kilburn. The colonists discovered that there were no roads built or cabins prepared on the lots as has been negotiated by Capt. Brown with the provincial government. The woods were thick and still had more than a foot of snow on the ground, which made it difficult to move their baggage and supplies out to their new properties.

Most of the families tented in Kilburn or slept in granaries for the first three or four weeks, until paths were cleared and small cabins constructed on the lots.

The settlers were not used to the hard physical work such as chopping trees and dragging heavy logs for land clearing and construction projects.

The settlers were not used to the hard physical work such as chopping trees and dragging heavy logs for land clearing and construction projects. After six weeks of exhausting work, 30 of the settlers gave up and went to work in Woodstock, Fredericton, or Saint John.

The next three years was a trying time for the Scottish settlers. The climate was much harsher than what they were used to and consequently they lost much of their planted crops to bad weather. Their living conditions were primitive and there was much work to be done just to survive.

Many families were going into debt, were often hungry, and their clothes were down to rags. There were no jobs in the area for earning more money, and they had no doctor or minister to tend to their physical and spiritual needs.

At the time Rev. Peter Melville arrived in the Scotch colony in 1875, he found the settlers in a sorry state. People were depressed and apathetic, social tensions among groups threatened to break up the colony. Most families kept only to themselves and held private religious services at home, and taught only their own children. There was no longer the high idealism as before or the social cohesiveness they knew in Scotland when life was easier and their church was foremost in their culture.

However, Melville was a great leader and organizer. He quickly brought people out of their depression and apathy by encouraging them to organize schools, prayer meetings, Bible classes, and elect Elders and Deacons to the church. He got the settlers to actively participate in their community again. This, in conjunction with his religious services, helped revive the positive attitudes the settlers had enjoyed before in Scotland.

The Scottish colonists were remarkably strong to so quickly shed their apathy, forget about personal grievances, and come together again as a colony of Scotsmen. Life was still physically hard, but it improved each year through much hard work.

Under the guidance of Melville the settlers built four schools and their first “Kirk” (church). Schools were built in Bon Accord, Kincardine, Upper Kintore, and Kintore. The first kirk was built in Kincardine from lumber supplied from each district.

Melville left the Scotch colony in 1878, and various ministers periodically resided in the colony, supported by the Mission Board of the Presbyterian Church, as the colonists had no cash to pay the stipend for a regular minister.

Nearly 20 years of hard work passed before the colonists were established enough to provide the money for a permanent minister. In 1896, Rev. Gordon Pringle became the minister and his stipend was set at $500 per year.

Pringle served as minister for the Scotch colony for 58 years. He was well loved and respected for his untiring work for the settlers. Under his direction and energy the colony grew and prospered. Churches were built in the other districts, and people grew well enough off to have an active community life with Scottish dances, poetry and music sessions, Burn’s Night, St. Andrew’s Day, and more.

Their dreams of starting a Scotch colony in New Brunswick where people could enjoy the rewards of their labours on their own places eventually came true. Through continuous labour and despite desperate times, the settlers persevered to at last build a comfortable life style with their Scottish heritage and church foremost again in their lives.

Published in: on May 4, 2011 at 8:59 pm  Leave a Comment  
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