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at Para and Main streets, Van Anda BC
Minister: Karen May,
BSR, DLM
Weekly service: Sundays, 10:30 a.m.
Texada Island United Church; Texada Island; texada church; Van Anda;
Powell River; united church; United Church of Canada; BC Conference;
Community Church;
The website of the Texada Island United Church, Van Anda BC provides
information and photos about this community church's operation; past ,
present and future.
Texada Island
United Church
On November 14, 1899, a meeting was held under the auspices of Westminster
Presbytery, at Van Anda, Texada Island, to organize a Presbyterian
congregation there. The congregation was named Texada Presbyterian Church,
and a church was built and dedicated in June, 1900. See a photo of the
church here. (click)
With church union in 1925, the congregation voted to join the new United
Church of Canada – a union of Congregationalist, Methodist, and
Presbyterian Churches across Canada. The name was changed to Texada United
Church.
In March, of 1943 this first church was destroyed by fire, and many
official church documents were destroyed. After much fund-raising, the
church was rebuilt in 1950, and re-dedicated in 1951.
The Texada Island United Church, officially the Texada Pastoral Charge was
at first a three-point charge consisting of Blubber Bay, Gillies Bay, and
Van Anda, with the largest congregation and the church building being
located in Van Anda. There is presently only one preaching point, in Van
Anda, serving the entire island of Texada.
Van Anda was the home base for the “Sky Pilot” marine mission work from
1925 to 1930. (click photos for larger view of a "Sky Pilot" Christmas
card and Rev. Pringle in his study)
The Rev. George Pringle ran gas boat missions to logging camps in mainland
inlets. (Texada Island, Bill Thompson, p.490). See another photo of the
"Sky Pilot" here. (click)
From 1930 to 1943, the Texada Island church was part of the Powell River
(Rural) Pastoral Charge, which included Westview, Cranberry, Van Anda, and
Blubber Bay. Texada Island has been an independent Pastoral Charge since
1943.
From 1925 to 1959, the Texada Island Pastoral Charge was part of Vancouver
Presbytery, and from 1959 to 1970, it was part of Vancouver-Burrard
Presbytery. Since 1970, it has been part of Comox-Nanaimo Presbytery.
In 1973, the church building was expanded through the efforts largely of
volunteer labour, and community contributions. Lay minister Alan Thompson
and his wife Shirley were instrumental in gaining possession of the
contents of the Bralorne Mining Community Church, including the beautiful
stained glass windows which have become an integral part of the present
Texada United Church. (The community of Bralorne was being dismantled,
following closure of the Bralorne mine.)
The Baptismal Font from Bralorne was eventually restored to that
community, in 2001. A new Baptismal Font was commissioned by Phyllis Soles
in memory of her late husband Colin Soles, and built by Jack Maciejko.
Texada United Church sits on the building site provided by the Copper and
Gold Co. in 1898, at the corner of Main St. and Para Ave. There were 3000
people on the island that year, and presently there are about 1200. The
fortunes of the church have fluctuated with the boom and bust pattern of
the mining industry, the economic engine of this island community.
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