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Anderson, The Reverend A. H.

by Catherine A. Scott
R. R. 1, 15th Road,
Haney, B. C.

My father was born May 4th, 1837 and died January 19th, 1927.
Mother was born October 21st, 1856 and died on August 28th, 1915.

Father was married to Mrs. Tozland, widow of the Reverend Mr. Tozland, but I am not sure of the date.  I think around 1920-21 or -22.  After Father died, she went back to her people in the U. S.  I don’t know her name, but I think it was Nan.

Father and Mother came to Manitoba in 1881, and Father was sent to open up new missions.  His photo, with other early ministers, is hanging in the McDougal Memorial Church at Edmonton.  All his books are there, and the minutes of the first western conference held at Winnipeg, in 1882, I think.

My sister, Theo Belle (Anderson) Moore, died last June 10th at Bella Bella.  There are just two of the Anderson family left, a brother ninety-one years old last March, living in Kansas City and myself.

Rev. A. H. Anderson

Rev. A. H. Anderson came to Manitoba in the spring of ’80.  They went by oxcart from Winnipeg to Brandon, - a terrible trip – spring floods – and the only places where they could stop for the night were someone’s house or shack.  You paid fifty cents or twenty-five cents, according to what part of the floor you could get to spread a blanket on and lie down for the night; men, women and children where they could find space.  My mother decided she and the baby would sleep outside in the wagon.  She and the baby caught a terrible cold and were sick when they arrived at Brandon.

The first summer was spent helping to break land and put up houses or shacks, in the Rapid City district.
Father’s first place of preaching was the old Nelson Mission.  I don’t know how long he preached there, but the next place was Portage la Prairie.  He must have spent three years there.  Then he went to Snow Flake to open up a mission there.  He used to walk thirty miles on a Sunday and preach three times that first year.  The second year he got a horse and buggy.

The parsonage was a small log house made of poplar logs and built on a hill.  The house, especially built for the coming parson, was so cold that first winter that Father had to keep a roaring fire in the stove until midnight and get up at 5 A.M. and get the fire going again.
He had a small log stable, which held a horse and a cow.  He spent two years there, and then was sent to Cypress Hills to open up or start a church there.  He was always sent to some settlement to open up a church or at least to hold services, in church if there was one, or in schools or homes.  Then he was sent to Killarney where there was a church and a half-finished parsonage.  I don’t know the year for sure, but it must have been 1893 or ’94, I think.  Perhaps a year or two earlier – I just don’t know for sure.

Father’s photo is hanging in the old McDougal Memorial Church in Edmonton, the photo taken in 1882 at the first Manitoba Conference held in Winnipeg.  He is with a group of early pioneer ministers that helped open up the prairie churches.  These dates are only guesswork, as I haven’t any of Father’s papers here.  A few years ago, I sent them all to the McDougal Memorial Museum. 
I think Father was three years preaching at Killarney.  Then he had to resign on account of health and some trouble with the powers over him.  So he bought the 160 acres and we moved out on the farm.  He had only a couple of drivers, a cow, a buggy and cutter and a family of small children.  It was July when he moved out, and he only got 10 acres broken that year.  It was done by members of his church.  You can imagine what a trying time it must have been.  I know he only had $250.00 a year coming in from his superannuation fund.  He got $125.00 in January, and $125.00 in July, and that’s all he had to start on.  By hard work and grim determination, we did pull through.  One thing I think must have looked odd and amusing to the neighbours was the fact of Father always wearing a white collar and stiff stove pipe hat when working on the land.

Father only had a year off, and then he was on call to fill in for someone sick, or lack of a minister for some church.  A good half of his time he was away preaching.  I think there weren’t many schools around that Father hadn’t preached in, even old Oak Ridge.  He got the debt on the old frame church paid off, and then Killarney Church started, and he worked hard to get the new (present) church underway.  The old church records must have information on how it was done.

I wonder if there are any old members living yet that remember a cold winter night and the minister having to close up the service on account of a terrible smell and many folks started sneezing.  I think Rev. Doyle was the minister at the time, or perhaps Van Roman (Have I the name correct, it was Van something).  The janitor and some of the men of the church went down to see what the trouble was but couldn’t find anything wrong.  Next day they took the furnace apart and cleaned pipes.  Father, coming home at noon, told us all about the work they had done and couldn’t find anything wrong, lit up the furnace again and no smell.  Well, crime will out, they say.  My youngest sister had taken a box of snuff that someone, for a joke, had sent father.  Reta had it in her coat pocket, and pulling out her handkerchief, the box of snuff came too, and fell on the hot air register.  She didn’t know what to do, so quickly brushed it all down the register and then went to her seat.  When she got home, she told Mother what she had done and didn’t want Mother to tell Father.  Mother promised to keep the secret but on condition Reta would walk the straight and narrow path in future.  We gals had many a good laughs over it.

Another time, they, Theo and Reta, took some pepper tied up in the corner of a handkerchief and the idea was to put it on some certain person’s collar.  She had it loose lying on the hymn book and when getting up for the hymn the pepper blew off and not where intended to go.  I believe dear old Grampa McLean got most of it and he started to sneeze and couldn’t stop and had to go out.  We often wondered if he suspected what had happened, for later, when talking to someone he said, “I like those girls but they are awful devils.”
This remark was quickly brought back and told to us, and we couldn’t understand why Grampa McLean should say such a thing.
Father baptized many babies while in Killarney, later he married them and again baptized their children when they arrived.
Father was Irish and loved a good joke and had he not been a minister, would have been a rip roaring old politician.  He dearly loved election time.  He was always chairman for whoever was electioneering.  When George Lawrence was M.P., he and Father worked together often.  When Geo. Lawrence took the holiday trip back to Ireland, he brought Father back a black thorn walking stick which we kids all called his “shillelagh.”  Theo still has the cane.

The old Bible Theo speaks of, given by John Wesley to our great grandfather, was one of Father’s prized possessions.  Once he was offered $500.00 for it and turned it down, said it must stay in the Anderson family.  It disappeared from the house at Father’s funeral, and the sixty-four dollar question is how and where is the Bible now.  It certainly must have had help, it couldn’t walk off by itself.  Some other leather-bound books Father had, written by John Wesley, we sent to the Toronto Methodist book-room museum.
Father was a Conservative, and a L. A. L. man, but I can’t remember anything else.  I hope you can pick out something from our letters that you can use.

As Theo says, most of the company we had were elderly folks, preachers and students, and as kids they didn’t appeal to us very much.  At family worship they used to offer up long prayers and keep us on our knees for too long.  Father’s rule when company was around was to be seen and not heard and only speak when spoken to.  A grim old rule that I am sure had a bad effect on us.  We used to keep out of sight and calling whenever we could, often sliding down a plank from an upstairs window if no other way of getting out was possible.

I remember a lecture from Father yet about daring to express my opinion on some (dear old saint?). The dear old saints never fooled me, I knew from a very young age when they were putting on an act for Father and resented it muchly and always.
When we were extra naughty, Father would say, “Those children of yours are needing attention,” to Mother.  We were always her children then, but if we were good and did something worthy of praise (once in a while we did), we were his children.  We all loved Father and were very loyal to him, but we liked being Mother’s children best.  When I used to kick over the traces and say what I thought of things in general, Father would look grieved and say, “I’m sure I don’t know where you get such a rebellious spirit from.  I’m sure it’s not from me.”
Father was a trusting mortal and many folks took advantage of it.  They would come with some hard luck story and Father of his little mite would help them out.  I remember him selling cleaned and graded wheat for seed, and just trusting them to pay, as they promised to do, and which they never did – always some hard luck story why they couldn’t.  We always did our shopping at T. J. Lawlor’s and in times of great need, Father had to charge it.  He hated to ask for credit, and only did when in desperate need.  If we couldn’t pay, we did without.  Don’t know what would have happened had Mr. Lawlor refused credit.

As we grew older, we kicked at Father filling in for other preachers and never getting paid.  When he went by train east or west, he paid his own expenses.  Once Rev. Saumby came out to get Father to take the church services at Morden for a month while the regular preacher was away sick.  Father wasn’t in when Mr. Saumby came and said what he wanted, so we girls put in a kick and told Mr. Saumby to please not ask Father, we were tired of him going away and never being paid.  Mr. Saumby was very surprised and asked Mother if that was so.  Mother told him yes, and how unfair we all thought it.  Mr. Saumby did ask Father to fill in, but from then on, Father was paid.  Father was very angry at us, and lectured us for saying anything, but I think he was glad of the pay.  Every time he would come back from a trip we always rushed out and said, “Did you get paid?”  He wouldn’t tell us, but Mother would when she found out.

This I must tell as it was such a sorrow to us.  Father used to get a large box of clothing, some used clothing and some yardage goods from some wealthy church back east.  He was to use it for the poor and where it was needed.  Great excitement among the parson’s kids when the box was opened and always the hope we might get something out of it – a lost hope, we never did.  It was for the poor, and there it went.

One bright spot, Mother’s folks back East used to send a barrel of things.  For several years when first on the farm we got this barrel.  It would have a large bag of dried apples, a big square tin of honey and several blocks of maple sugar, also some pieces of cloth, and a large bundle of knitting yarn, from which Mother knitted Father’s socks, our mittens and caps.  I guess it saved the day for Mother.
Not much of historical value, but it’s the best I can do.  Father was always sent to open up new districts or to pull a church out of debt and get it going again.  He always seemed to manage that, and he used to be away from home a lot.  He kept splendid driving horses and they went all over southern Manitoba.