Vancouver Assembly, BC

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Canada – West



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[edit] History

The city of Vancouver was established soon after the Canadian Pacific Railway agreed to put its terminus in the area in 1884. The city grew rapidly in the 1890s during the Klondike Gold Rush.


In 1897, James Rae, then 25 years old and a son of John Rae Sr., an evangelist working in Manitoba and North Dakota, arrived in Vancouver to open a shoe store. He soon found other believers of like mind, and the small group formed an assembly in 1898. These included Harry Douglas, Alex Anderson, and William Woods and their wives, along with James Rae.


Others soon joined with the Vancouver Assembly, including James Rae’s wife who arrived from Winnipeg, Mr. Murchie, Mrs. Jess, Mrs. Miller, Mr. and Mrs Alex Matthews Jr., and Mr. John Currie. Messrs. Swain and Parnell came for a few months and stayed until a new assembly was formed in New Westminster on the southeast side of Greater Vancouver.


The original Vancouver Assembly met first in an upstairs room above Harvey’s store at Hastings Street and Westminster Road. Next they met on Cordova St. above a meat market; then in an upstairs room on Cordova Street near Cambie Street, and then later to an undertaker’s parlour on Granville Street.


People arrived in the city daily from England, Eastern Canada, and the Prairies. It was not unusual for several ‘Letters of Commendation’ to be read on Lord’s Day mornings, and the assembly grew rapidly. Soon, larger quarters were needed, and Mr. Muncie from the Victoria Gospel Hall built a large Seymour Street Gospel Hall for the believers, at 1181 Seymour Streeet, and this became the meeting place for many years. Most of the traveling Brethren evangelists of the day preached at the early Vancouver/Seymour Street Assembly.


The Seymour Street Gospel Hall moved in 1947 from its downtown location to a residential section about three miles west at Sixteenth and MacDonald and took the name 16th & MacDonald Gospel Hall. Since then it has become known as the Sixteenth Avenue Gospel Chapel. Others in early leadership, in addition to those mentioned above, were Gordon Budd, Stanley Budd, Harold Summers, Ronald Sellers, and Leslie Richmond. Since then, Geofferey Lloyd, William Cummings, Leslie Jones, Clem Aitken, Ernie Peters, Harold Diewert, Samuel Gilmour, Robert Shannon, Eric Peterson, Teus Kappers, Jim Hathaway, Jay Levielle, Harold Summers Jr., and Harold Budd have shared leadership of the assembly. Several have been commended to the Lord’s work. About 120 adults are in fellowship, with 40 children.

[edit] Address/Contact

Current Address, Date

Street

City , State,

Canada

Phone #

Google Maps

Contact Address

Contact Name

Street

City , State,

Phone #

Google Maps

Past Address, Date

Building Name

Street

City , State

Past Address, Date

Building Name

Street

City , State

[edit] Links

[edit] Meetings

[edit] Leadership

Present Elders



Past Elders



Present Deacons



Past Deacons

[edit] Commended Workers/Ministries

Full-Time Service

Canada


Overseas

[edit] Also See

Lathom Road Gospel Hall, Port Alberni, BC

Helen Street Gospel Hall, Port Alberni, BC

Elim Gospel Chapel, Courtenay, BC

Elim Hall, Courtenay, BC

Vancouver Assembly, BC

Seymour Street Gospel Hall, Vancouver, BC

16th & MacDonald Gospel Hall, Vancouver, BC

Sixteenth Avenue Gospel Chapel, Vancouver, BC


[edit] Author

Robert L. Peterson

Dan H. Smith, Ed.D. President, Emmaus Bible College

[edit] Resources

Questionnaire responses and other correspondence

History of the Assembly in Portage La Prairie, Manitoba, by Amy Spence, 1987

History Outline of the Balsam Bay Assembly, by Harry Newman, 1977

Brandon Gospel Hall, 1888 - 1988

The (Austin) Gospel Hall Story, by Lyle Knox, about 1985

St. James Gospel Chapel, Historic Highlights, undated

History of Arlington Street Gospel Chapel, by H. Zimmermann, undated

Letters of Interest, June 1955, p. 12

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