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       WINNIPEG in those days was the Mecca of the fortune 
      seeking and the land hungry from the older portions of the Empire and from 
      other countries as well. For all Scotch folk, and for all folk of 
      Presbyterian extraction, connection or leaning, the Presbyterian minister 
      was the natural resort for all in need of advice, of guidance, of cheer, 
      of aid financial and other, and the minister’s home became a kind of 
      Immigration Office, a General Information Bureau, an Employment Agency, an 
      Institution for Universal Aid. This meant to the minister that his time 
      and strength, and often his money, were at the command of all who came to 
      his door. To his wife it meant a good deal more. For not only did they 
      keep open house, but an open table as well. This necessitated a  
      larder continually stocked, a kitchen 
      never anything but busy. This was hard enough upon the mistress of the 
      house, with her young family about her, and her congregational duties 
      demanding her time, strength and thought; but for all ordinary exigencies 
      Mrs. Robertson was always ready. But when at the dinner hour her husband 
      calmly ushered in some half dozen or dozen hungry folk, if her nerve 
      failed her for the moment, what wonder? There was, however, no breakdown 
      of the spirit of hospitality, and no failure upon the part of either 
      minister or minister’s wife to show kindness to the stranger. By the 
      minister this was accepted as a part of his regular duty, and as affording 
      a valuable opportunity of service. By the minister’s wife, as part of the 
      burden, not to say cross, laid on her as her husband’s wife.
      But through all the years of the 
      Knox Church pastorate no immigrant called on Mr. Robertson in vain for 
      aid, and none was turned away from that hospitable door. Many years 
      afterwards one of these immigrants, remembering gratefully his kindness to 
      the stranger, thus writes: 
      "On my arrival in Winnipeg 
      twenty-four years ago, at that time a town of five thousand people, I 
      called on Mr. Robertson who was then pastor of Knox Church. He came with 
      me at once and guided me to a desirable hotel where our family of seven 
      persons could be accommodated. Besides, he spent a forenoon in aiding me 
      to get my effects through the Customs, a thing that a stranger could not 
      do. 
      "Nearly every day he was called on 
      by some strangers from the Old Land and from our Eastern Provinces with 
      many questions to ask, and he patiently heard them and intelligently 
      answered them. He knew more of the Prairie province than  
      most 
      men, and newcomers were always befriended by him. Knox Church was then a 
      large congregation, and rapidly becoming larger, and demanded much of his 
      time. But with all the pressure upon his time, he never complained of 
      being overburdened in seeing to the wants of newcomers from other lands.
      "I know of some instances of men 
      who, when they came  to our 
      Province, were short of funds. Though Mr. Robertson had no money to spare, 
      they came to him in their distress and he handed them what money they 
      wanted. And I have the best of reasons to 
      believe that these borrowings were never repaid."
      Patience of spirit was by no means a 
      striking characteristic of Mr. Robertson in those eager, busy years. But 
      for the stranger, lonely, poor, heart-sick, his patience never failed. 
      Often imposed upon, he never sent men away without an attempt, at least, 
      to meet their wants. They came to him for meals and lodgings, and he took 
      them in. They came seeking work and he tramped the street with them. They 
      came selling extraordinarily unuseful articles and he purchased of them 
      all. His wife remembers one unhappy agent selling coat hangers from whom 
      the minister bought half a dozen, though at the time he had only a single 
      coat needing a hanger. Another day a gentleman too proud to beg and too 
      honest to borrow, offers for sale a pair of high riding boots. The 
      minister buys them for $6.00, though he knows they are sizes too small. He 
      is gaining experience and other things besides, for which he is paying 
      dear, but ever without a grudge. The time will come when in settlements 
      far away he will meet those who will think it joy to serve him and for his 
      sake the cause he loves. 
      After many years had passed, a 
      friend of his came upon one of those who counted it honour to do him 
      service. This friend writes: 
      "I drove up to a comfortable looking 
      homestead. The house was built of logs, not grand, but comfortable. The 
      barn, however, was truly magnificent and thoroughly equipped with the most 
      up-to-date appliances for scientific stock-raising. I had never seen 
      anything like it even among the wealthy farmers in Ontario. The stables 
      were full of horses and in the fields far away a large herd of cattle 
      could be seen. It was evidently a farm of great prosperity, and indicated 
      growing wealth. 
      "In the house I found an old Scotch 
      lady and her two sons, fine young fellows. I mentioned the name of Dr. 
      Robertson and at once the shrewd old face took on a different look. It 
      seemed to fill up with kindness, and she began to talk. She had a 
      remarkable story to tell. 
      Twenty-one years before, she, with 
      her husband and two baby boys, had come to Winnipeg. They had not much 
      money, and all they had they invested in an ox-team, waggon and general 
      outfit. They spent a Sunday at the immigration sheds in Winnipeg. The 
      Presbyterian minister came down to preach to the immigrants in the 
      afternoon. The place was uncomfortable and crowded. Her baby was fretful, 
      and so the mother sat outside the door; it was a warm spring day, and 
      there she listened to the sermon. She could not see the preacher’s face, 
      but she gave me a good bit of that sermon. The theme was Abraham and his 
      northwest adventure, and the parallel was drawn between him and these 
      people who were about to seek their fortune in the West. The two main 
      thoughts that the old lady carried with her for these twenty years were 
      these: ‘God is going with you. Do not be discouraged. Never give up hope,’ 
      and ‘You are going to make a new country, build your foundations for God.’ 
      She remembered the grip of the minister’s hand as next day he went with 
      them far out on to the prairie to set them on their westward journey, and 
      how standing there he bade them a cheery farewell and watched them almost 
      out of sight. His words of cheer stood them in good stead on that journey. 
      As they neared the Portage plains they found the prairie one great wide 
      expanse of black mud and water through which laden teams were frantically 
      struggling, trying to get through. Again and again the husband was forced 
      to unload his stuff, the mother holding her two babies in the waggon, till 
      at last in despair he was for turning back. But the wife would not hear of 
      it. The words of the preacher rang in her heart, ‘Never fear. God is with 
      you. Don’t turn back.’ And they did not. 
      "They reached their location and 
      began to farm. Within two years her husband died and the mother with her 
      two little boys were left alone. But the neighbours were kind. She could 
      get plenty of work to do. She did the washing for the bachelors round 
      about, and baked bread for the villagers. She had no one with whom she 
      could leave the children, but back and forward she went with her washing 
      and her bread, leading one child by the hand and carrying the other upon 
      her back, going barefoot through the water of the slough to save her 
      boots. 
      "Her people in Scotland were anxious 
      to have her return home, but she would not. She believed that God was with 
      her and that she should not turn back. To-day, with a section and a half 
      of the best land that the sun shines on, with barn and stables, cattle and 
      horses, she has proved again that God keeps His promises. And often 
      through these years by her devotion to the cause he represented, has she 
      shown her gratitude to the minister who preached to her in Winnipeg that 
      day and whose words upheld her for many a day afterwards." 
      But many are the stories that could 
      be told of the wider ministry of the pastor of Knox Church of that day in 
      behalf of those needy immigrants, and many of these same immigrants, now 
      prosperous merchants or wealthy farmers, remember with grateful hearts and 
      hearty greeting, the sympathetic hearing, that firm, strong, downward grip 
      of the hand of the Presbyterian minister of Winnipeg to whom they appealed 
      for help when help was needed, and never vainly.  |