Confirmation Journeys in 1845.
OUR readers will not expect that we should give in
my detail, or even at much length, the accounts of the journeys for the
holding of Confirmations throughout the Diocese made by the late Bishop
of Toronto; although the published journals of these visitations supply
many statistical facts of great value in respect to the physical
improvement as well as religious progress of the country. We must,
therefore, content ourselves with a few extracts, which will be
instructive as well as interesting.
On a hot and dusty day in July, 1845, the Bishop visited
Binbrook, and returned to Hamilton in the evening. The conversation
turned on the progress of the Church in the Diocese; and the Bishop
remarking that this was more rapid, as a general rule, in the new
settlements than in the old, and in the towns than in the country,
accounted for this fact in the following manner:—
“At the first settlement of Upper Canada, the U. E.
loyalists, —most of whom were members of the Church of England,—
constituted the great majority of the inhabitants. But, instead of being
placed in contiguous neighbourhoods, where schools and ministrations of
religion might have been supplied with comparative ease, they were
scattered over many districts, and so poor and few in number at any one
point, that the attainment of these advantages was impossible: And when,
after a long intervening sickness of heart from hope deferred, these
great blessings came to be despaired of they by-and-by ceased with many
to be viewed with concern or anxiety. This was the more to be deplored,
because the Government had manifested much kindness in their case; but
the expense attending the assistance awarded to the patriotic settlers
at their scattered localities, in conveying provisions, farming
utensils, Ac., cost more than the supply of these articles, even with
the addition of schools and churches, would have done, had the
settlements been judiciously concentrated. There was, for many years,
scarcely any commerce in the Province; and the little produce which the
inhabitants were able to raise by their hard labour,—since cattle and
horses were for a time out of the question,—-commanded very low prices,
and forced upon them habits of extreme parsimony, in order to obtain
even a small portion of what, before the American Revolution, they had
considered necessaries of life. Hence, when their circumstances were
somewhat mended, they were unwilling to contribute towards the support
of schools and the ministrations of religion, of which they had so long
been deprived, and for which many of them had lost both taste and
regard. In such a sad state of things, their children grew up without
instruction; and a deadness to Christianity has, in some cases, been
perpetuated to the present day.”
Many of our readers will have noticed the realization of
this statement in the languid and declining condition of the Church in
some of our oldest settlements; in some of our wealthy farming tracts
where the old inhabitants, with traditional attachment to the Church,
have died out; and in some of our older villages whence life and vigour
seem to have evaporated with the migration of the young and enterprising
to fresher scenes. Recalling this fact, we shall feel it to be a mistake
to say that pecuniary aid for the support of the Church should be denied
to such places, and given only to new and distant settlements.
The following interesting account is given of a visit to
the Tuscarora Mission under the charge of the Rev. Adam Elliott:—
“This mission comprehends three tribes, the Tuscaroras,
Delawares, and Cayugas. The greater number of the first have long been
converted, but the Delawares were for the most part jmgans until within
a few years: now, however, through the indefatigable exertions of Mr.
Elliott, they are nearly all converted; and even the Cayugas, who have
so long kept aloof and clung to their idolatry, are beginning to relax
from their prejudices, and to discover the Divine origin of
Christianity, and the futility of their own religious belief. Many
adhere to the idea that their religion came from heaven, and that
spirits appeared to them and forbade them to change; yet, with all their
characteristic shrewdness, they confess themselves unable to bring
forward proof or argument. As the Missionary is making progress with the
young,—for they are very desirous of having their children educated,—the
parents are gradually reached through them. A great attraction with them
is the Mechanical Institution, where they soon learn to construct the
ordinary farming utensils and other implements of daily use, established
at the Mohawk village; an institution highly creditable to the New
England Society, at whose expense it is maintained.
“Thirty-four Indians were confirmed on this occasion,—
several of them very old. One woman in particular must have exceeded
eighty; and amongst the number was a lame warrior of the Delaware tribe,
a person of great shrewdness, and, till lately, a stern pagan. A great
taste for sacred music was discernible in the congregation. A choir has
been formed, and they have learned music by note. They had their books
before them, and it was pleasing to see them turn to the tune and sing
from the notes. What was still more remarkable, one of them had
constructed a bass-viol, on which he played and kept time with great
accuracy. The Missionary informed us that many of his people had a great
faculty in learning languages, and he brought forward a chief who
affirmed that he knew, almost all the Indian dialects in North America.
He was naturally eloquent; and, in a short conversation, made many
shrewd remarks upon the peculiar situation of his countrymen, and their
relations with the white population and the Government.”
The following pleasing episode occurs in the account of
his Confirmation journey westwards:—
“While we were resting on the little gallery before the
door of the inn, there came up a rough waggon half-loaded with boards.
The driver drew up to water his 'team' and sat down on the steps near
the Bishop. He seemed intelligent, but dissipated and careworn; and the
Bishop entered into conversation with him, and asked him the way to the
Church at Dereham, the road to which was represented as rather
intricate, but could obtain no information from him upon this point. As
is not unusual, the man, finding himself treated kindly, entered into a
sort of history of his life. He said he had come into this Province at
an early day, and had by his industry acquired an excellent farm; had
married a wife, to whom he was much attached; and had had two fine
children. He stated further that his wife and children, some years ago,
were carried off by the ‘lake fever' and ever since he had been
listless, perhaps reckless, and could never bear to stay at home, and
attend to the usual business of his farm. He chose rather, he said, to
employ himself with his-waggon in conveying loads from place to place;
but he was afraid that this loose way of life had introduced him to bad
company, and, as a consequence, to intemperate habits. ‘Alas' said the
poor man with some emotion, ‘what am I to do? I see my two brothers,
with their wives and children, living comfortably on their farms; and
when I visit mine, there is none to welcome me; while the remembrance of
the time rushes on my spirit when I, too, met joyful faces, and had a
happy fireside: I feel forlorn' he added, 'and am eager to get away.’
“There was evidently a deep well of feeling in this man,
who had thus become, as it were, a cast-away. We all got interested, and
the Bishop, with much affection, endeavoured to turn his attention to
better things and better hopes. ‘Why, my friend' he asked him, ‘have you
not, under this chastening, had recourse to religion,—to prayer, reading
your Bible, thoughtful meditation, and attendance on the means of grace?
All this might, with the Divine blessing, do much for you.’ ‘I have
often gone to meeting/ said the man, ‘but found no comfort. The old
members were all satisfied with themselves, and looked upon me with
contempt.
They called themselves “the chosen few”; told me the day,
and even the hour, when they were converted, or, as they term it, when
they got religion; and yet, in my dealings with them, I found neither
truth nor honesty. 1 felt none of those things, and 1 am unable to
believe that a man can be religious without being good.' The Bishop
agreed that such could not be religious people; and then remonstrated
gently with him on his present way of life, and exhorted him to keep to
his farm. Finding, too, that he had a Bible and Prayer Book which
belonged to his wife, he seized upon his tender feelings for the
departed, and urged him to use them diligently, evening and morning, and
after a little time he would, with God’s blessing, derive comfort from
such a course, and be enabled, with His help, to part with those
irregular habits into which he had fallen The man went away apparently
much encouraged; and our waggon being ready, we pursued our journey.
Were this man in the neighbourhood of one of our Clergy, who could see
him occasionally, instruct him in the truth, and lead him to public
worship, and habits of piety, he might, we may reasonably hope, still be
recovered; but, unhappily, we have no Clergyman within twelve miles of
the farm upon which he occasionally resides.”
Of his visit to Westminster, the Bishop has occasion to
speak in this pleasant strain :—
“In this place we have another example of what a willing
heart and persevering energy can do. We owe this Church almost entirely
to the vigorous and unwearied efforts of Mrs. Watson: a lady who came to
Canada principally with the view of establishing her nephews on land. On
arriving at this settlement, where a purchase had been made on her
behalf, she found it entirely unprovided with religious ordinances. She
accordingly gave ten acres on which to build the Church : she appealed
to her friends in England for assistance ; and now she has the
satisfaction of beholding her efforts crowned with success. Her piety is
active and unaffected ; and the good she has done and is doing, in
promoting the cause of religion in her neighbourhood, is beyond price. A
few such persons in every District, and their waste places would soon
rejoice and blossom.”
He speaks in the same encouraging manner of the Church at
Morpeth
“We owe this Church, so far as it has proceeded, almost
entirely to the liberality of five zealous farmers, though not more
wealthy than many around them, and they deserve to be honourably
mentioned. First, John and Freeman Green, two brothel’s. John gave the
site for the Church, Parsonage, and Burial-ground, consisting of six
acres in a very eligible situation, and fifty dollars in money. Freeman
gave one hundred dollars; Walter Patterson and John Degrand gave each
one hundred dollars; and so did David Gesner, although living five miles
distant,—because he considered the position central for the settlement
Now, considering the station of the parties, and the low price of
produce for some years past, these contributions may be considered very
large; and there is no doubt that they will yet do more, and, by
influencing their neighbours, contrive to finish the Church. Some of
them are from Dunwich, where they had been accustomed to see a still
greater liberality, and certainly the example was not lost upon them. To
encourage them, I paid over the liberal donation of £25 sterling made by
Lord Morpeth for the benefit of this- Church,—a very seasonable help
towards completing their sacred edifice, and likely to crown with
success the exertions of these honest and right-hearted people.”
The following remarks and incidents connected with the
Bishop’s visit to Walpole Island, are very interesting :—
“Walpole Island seems to be a continuation of the
shallows or flats of Lake St. Clair, and to have been formed from
deposits from the upper lakes. The soil is altogether alluvial, and the
surface is so little raised above the river that the greater portion is
covered with water, when the lakes and rivers rise. This they seem to do
periodically, although the exact cycle has not yet been ascertained. It
is a curious fact, the cause of which has not yet been solved, that when
the waters of the large rivers and lakes are high, the small lakes and
rivulets in the interior which have no communication with them, are
likewise high. Thus, for instance, Lake Simcoe, the most elevated of all
the lakes, empties itself by the River Severn into Lake Huron, with a
fall of from seventy to eighty feet; yet when the waters of Lakes
Superior, Huron, Erie, and Ontario, are high, Lake Simcoe is high also.
This periodical rise of all the waters of this section of the American
continent, has never yet been satisfactorily accounted for. It is
attributed, indeed, to greater falls of snow occasionally happening in
the North West; but this might bear upon the great lakes which are
directly connected with it, but can have no influence upon the smaller
interior lakes where no additional snows and rains appear to have
fallen.
“We made [after service on the island] a hasty dinner
with Mr. and Mrs. Keating; and as it was by this time getting dark and
threatening rain, we hurried to get across to the main shore. In our
haste we did not perceive, till we cast off from the land and were in
the stream, that our canoe was too small for our number and the water
within an inch of its edge. Had there been any wind, we should have be8n
in the greatest danger; but, blessed be God, by using every precaution,
sitting quiet, and maintaining a careful balance, we got over safe. The
Indian who paddled us across, seeing the storm approach, hastened back,
aud had scarcely reached the island when the rain, and thunder and
lightning commenced in a terrific manner.
“As there was no sort of accommodation whatever at the
small tavern where we had left our horses and waggon, we were compelled
to move forward in the hope of reaching an inn a few miles further up
the river St Clair. By this time it was growing dark, and before we had
proceeded half-a-mile, the rain came down in torrents, and the thunder
and lightning became so frequent and terrible, that our horses trembled
and could scarcely keep their legs. The darkness also became so great
that, except from the flashes of lightning, we were unable to see the
road. Having crept forwards about a mile and a half,—the storm
continuing without intermission,—we descried, from a friendly flash of
lightning, p. farm-house, and happy were the party when I consented to
stop. It was now late, for we had consumed much time in making this
short journey, and the inmates of the house were all sound asleep. After
knocking for some time, they at length opened the door and let us in. We
stated our distress and the causes that made us disturb them,—which
indeed were sufficiently visible from our miserable and drowned
appearance,—and upon hearing our story, they received us kindly, and did
all in their power to make us comfortable.”
But this was nothing in comparison with the difficulties
encountered on the journey from Owen Sound to Guelph. To the former
place the Bishop had gone by steamer from Manitoulin Island. At
starting, he says :—
“We found the road very rough, and getting worse as we
proceeded. It ran along a stony ridge, which seems to have been chosen
in preference to the low grounds which, in many places, were low and
marshy. Be this as it may, what with large stones, deep crevices between
them, roots of trees, and deep holes, the shaking of the waggon became
intolerable.” After confirming at two places, the latter thirteen miles
from Owen Sound, “we left for Edge’s at half-past four; and, though
scarcely nine miles off, with little hope of getting there, as the road
was becoming more and more impracticable. After bounding from stone to
stone, the rain meanwhile falling in torrents, and occasionally a deep
hole by way of variety, we found darkness rapidly approaching, and were
glad to crave shelter for the night from Mr. Smith, who, with his wife
and ten sons and one daughter, had taken up land from Government, and
was gradually clearing a good farm. We no doubt put the family to much
inconvenience, yet they made us heartily welcome, and insisted that we
should occupy their beds, such as they were, and doing all in their
power to make us comfortable.
“We rose next morning as soon as we could see, and the
rain having abated, we got ready for our journey. A mile onwards there
is a very long, deep slough, full of roots and loose stones, through
which the Smiths told us it would be impossible for the horses to drag
the waggon, and they very kindly offered to accompany us and assist us
in getting past it. We found their account of it by no means
exaggerated, for we were obliged to take the horses from the waggon,
then they plunged so much, and got so deep in the mud, that they were in
the greatest danger of sinking over their heads. The poor animals, when
they at length reached the firm soil, trembled and looked much
frightened. The waggon was dragged through by three of the Smiths, the
driver, and two men whom I had hired to attend us on this perilous
journey. The Smiths returned home, and w.e sent forward to Edge’s to
request that they would meet us with a yoke of oxen at a bridge over the
river Saugeen, which was said to be very insecure, and at the further
end of which was a slough much worse than the one we had just passed. We
soon came to the bridge, where we alighted; and after examining it, and
carefully mending some of the holes, by using great caution we got the
waggon and horses safely across. But they had no sooner left it, than
they sunk so deep into the mire that we thought they should be lost.
After some labour, we got their harness off, and separated them from the
waggon, and then, on our cheering them, (for they appeared frightened
and ready to give up,) they were roused to fresh exertion, and at length
we got them upon hard ground. Had it not been for the two men who
attended us, and the driver, the poor animals would have been inevitably
smothered.
“After extricating the horses, we waited patiently for
the oxen, —the waggon in the meantime floating on the slough, the wheels
having sunk below the hubs. At length we heard them coming down the hill
beyond us, which was thickly covered with trees; and from the noise, one
of our attendants, an American, pronounced the driver to be an Irishman,
and therefore knowing nothing about the management of oxen. Of the
correctness of this judgment we soon had abundant experience, for the
Irishman was unable, without the aid of the American, to ‘hitch' as they
call it, the oxen to the waggon, and nothwithstanding our remonstrances
would insist on driving them himself. The consequence was, that he drove
them between two large trees, alleging that there was sufficient room
for the passage of the waggon, although it was quite evident that he was
mistaken. The oxen struggled through, the one a little ahead of the
other; but when the waggon came up, it was jammed immovably between two
trees. ‘I guess' said the American, ‘that you have got into a pretty bit
of a fix.’ The poor Irishman was much mortified; but comforted himself
with observing that he had never driven oxen but twice before. The
American was desired to take charge, and as there was no alternative,
one of the trees was ordered to be cut down. This was, however, a work
of time, for we had no axe, only a tomahawk ; and a work of skill too,
for there was no little danger of the tree falling on the waggon, or
doing other damage. But the American was experienced in such matters:
the tree was skilfully felled; and the oxen having been again attached
to the waggon, struggled through the swamp and reached the bottom of the
hill. The road up the declivity was so wet and slippery, and withal so
deep, that the poor oxen were put to the exertion of their utmost
strength to reach the top. This was a severe trial to us all, but it was
useless to murmur. We had been seven hours getting over nine miles, and
it was past ten when we reached Edge’s house. At eleven we had service:
the Congregation numbering seventeen, and only one person was presented
for Confirmation.
“We proceeded on our journey at half-past one, and had
not advanced far when we found the road, or path, obstructed by a large
tree, which a settler had just cut down and was in the act of dividing
into lengths. We found much difficulty in getting round through the wood
: we asked very civilly why he had blocked up the road ; but instead of
answering, he smiled and seemed to enjoy our difficulty. We thought him
rude and insolent, but he had no such meaning ; for going a little
further on, we stuck fast in a bad mud-hole, and in a moment we saw the
chopper running to our assistance. Luckily, two other men came up who
were on their way to fish in the River Saugeen, and who, seeing our
distress, very willingly offered to help us. With these additional
hands, we managed to relieve the horses, and to drag the waggon along
till we reached the hard ground. The two fishermen volunteered to
accompany us two miles further, where there was the worst slough, they
said, upon the whole road between Owen Sound and Fergus. There were
several bad spots before we reached this,—the king of mud-holes,—which
it cost us no little trouble to get over. We now began to dread these
sloughs, and the poor horses trembled "when they saw one. At length we
reached the famous mud-hole, pronounced by the settlers so formidable.
We made a halt to beat up for additional recruits : oxen were not to be
had, nor was it quite clear that even they could have got through with
the waggon, the swamp was so long, so deep, and so intersected with
fallen trees, roots and stones. I held the two riding horses, and all
the party, including the Rev. Mr. Mockridge, the verger, and four
settlers whom we had collected, besides those who had come with us, went
to work, and with strong arms pulled the waggon through. We had taken
fourteen hours, including the service, to travel seventeen miles.
"We did not reach Mr. Realty’s, our next appointment,
till nearly 7 o’clock, although, in ignorance of the road, I had
appointed three o’clock for the service. The people, however, judging
more wisely of the obstructions on the way, did not begin to assemble
till after 6 o’clock, and we overtook many of them as we passed along.
The service commenced immediately on our arrival; the house was crowded;
and the congregation were much affected by the prayers, sermon, and
address to the candidates for Confirmation,—these last being only three
in number. What with the largeness of the congregation, and the
attention and feeling which they manifested, I felt myself more than
rewarded for all the difficulties and toils I had endured.”
The trials of the two following days were not so
formidable, and Elora was safely reached on the evening of the 29th
August. In the course of his journey, the Bishop frequently heard
complaints from the people in the newly opened settlements.
“They would speak bitterly and feelingly of their
grievances ; that they had no mill within many miles, and had sometimes
to carry on their backs their wheat to be ground, and to carry it home
again in flour in the same way. Mere trifles, he would reply. I was in
the Province when it contained scarcely a mill in any part of it, and
the people had often to travel more than a hundred miles to get their
wheat ground; and as this could only be done in winter, they used to
bruise their com and wheat in the interval between smooth stones, and
make rough bread of it iu that way. Others would complain of their hard
labour; and he would ask them, in reply, how long they would have had to
labour at home before they obtained, what they now possessed,— a
freehold of 100 acres of land.
“An Irishman was detailing his many grievances with some
eloquence; but it had come out that he had been a hodman, attending
masons in Glasgow before he came to Canada. I said nothing until he had
expatiated upon all his difficulties, and had come to a full stop. I
then took up an axe, and asked him if this was as heavy as a hod of
brick 1 The Irishman appeared surprised, and said, 'surely not' How many
years' I replied, ‘must you have carried the hod to the top of the
highest building in Glasgow, before you could get a farm like the one
you are now cultivating? ‘You are right' said the Irishman, with the
honest frankness of his countrymen: ‘at home there is no prospect of
bettering our situation; sickness and old age, too, are frightful; but
here we have plenty to eat and drink, good hopes for our children, and a
comfortable old age for ourselves'. It was easy, after this, to turn the
conversation to their religious condition; urge upon them family worship
and Sunday-schools; learning portions of the Psalms, and repeating them
as sources of consolation; reading the Scriptures regularly, and
remembering to keep holy the Lord’s Day.”
This was a most laborious Confirmation tour; commencing
on the 14th July, and, after unremitted travelling and services, ending
on the 8th September. About 1600 miles by land and water were traversed;
and notwithstanding the great extent of country to be visited, and the
number of appointments to be kept,—some of them far distant the one from
the other, and others separated by roads or paths all but
impassable,—the Bishop was enabled by Divine favour, to keep every one
of them, and through judicious arrangements and active travelling, was
late only two or three times. In these touching words, he says, “I have
much reason to be thankful: the Church prospers; and my journeys and
fatigues are every where sweetened by cordial welcome and respect. In
every house we enter, there is the kind hand and happy look to greet us;
and surely, under such circumstances, labours and perils might be
cheerfully endured, were they threefold greater than they are.” |