We found 14 more Anglican churches near Sackville
- St. John the Evangelist Sackville, Lower Sackville (0.08 miles)
- Saint Francis by the Lakes Anglican Church, Halifax (1.97 miles)
- St. Francis by the Lakes Lower Sackville, Lower Sackville (1.97 miles)
- Church of Good Shepherd Beaver Bank, Beaver Bank (3.58 miles)
- Beaver Bank, Beaver Bank (3.58 miles)
- All Saints Anglican Church, Bedford (3.8 miles)
- St. John's Anglican Church, Halifax (3.98 miles)
- St Thomas' Anglican Church, Fall River (5.89 miles)
- St. Luke, Dartmouth (6.52 miles)
- St. Mark Martin's Point, Martin's Point (6.83 miles)
- St. Martin Martin's River, Martin's River (6.83 miles)
- St. John Mochelle, Mochelle (6.83 miles)
- St. Mark, Martin's Point (6.83 miles)
- St. Peter's Anglican Church, Halifax (6.84 miles)
- Anglican Churches in Sackville, NS
- Anglican Churches in Nova Scotia
- Anglican Churches in Canada
- Anglican Churches near me
- All churches in Sackville, NS
Who we are
Prayer and Praise – Food, Fellowship and Fun!
Are you looking for a home church or visiting in the area? We would love to have you drop in! We welcome everyone from all faith backgrounds and those seeking a spiritual home.
We are happy to discuss Baptism, Marriage or Funeral/Memorial services with you and encourage you to explore these important rites in your life.
You will find us at: Church – 954 Old Sackville Road, Middle Sackville, NS B4C 3J1 Hall – 934 Old Sackville Road, Middle Sackville, NS B4C 3J1
Contemplative Services: 7:00 pm Wednesday and 8:30 am on Sunday
Family Service with Godly Play for the children: 10:30 am on Sunday followed by Food and Fellowship
Our younger members enjoy Godly Play (ages 4 to 12) held during the 10:30 a.m. Sunday Service. This is a Montessori style of learning that is proving engaging and effective.
The fourth Sunday of each month we meet in the Hall for the 10:30 am service a barrier-free, family friendly, Community Worship at 10:30 am.
Are you looking for a home church or visiting in the area? We would love to have you drop in! We welcome everyone from all faith backgrounds and those seeking a spiritual home.
We are happy to discuss Baptism, Marriage or Funeral/Memorial services with you and encourage you to explore these important rites in your life.
You will find us at: Church – 954 Old Sackville Road, Middle Sackville, NS B4C 3J1 Hall – 934 Old Sackville Road, Middle Sackville, NS B4C 3J1
Contemplative Services: 7:00 pm Wednesday and 8:30 am on Sunday
Family Service with Godly Play for the children: 10:30 am on Sunday followed by Food and Fellowship
Our younger members enjoy Godly Play (ages 4 to 12) held during the 10:30 a.m. Sunday Service. This is a Montessori style of learning that is proving engaging and effective.
The fourth Sunday of each month we meet in the Hall for the 10:30 am service a barrier-free, family friendly, Community Worship at 10:30 am.
Street Address
Church Pastor
Rt. Rev. Bishop Sue Moxley
Priest in Charge
954 Old Sackville Road
Sackville,
NS
B4E 1R3
Canada
Phone: (902) 864-3154
Download Priest in Charge Rt. Rev. Bishop Sue Moxley vCard
Click here to contact Rt. Rev. Bishop Sue Moxley
Denomination
Anglican Church
Affiliations
Church Website
St John The Evangelist on Social Media
Leadership
Leader Name:
Rt. Rev. Bishop Sue Moxley
Leader Position:
Priest in Charge
Formal Title:
Leader Address:
Phone:
Fax:
Leader Email:
Click here to contact Rt. Rev. Bishop Sue Moxley
Leader Bio:
Rt. Rev. Bishop Sue Moxley on Social Media:
Other Church Leaders:
Wardens:
Jeff Reid
Doug Holmes
Darryl Spidell
Organist: Jacalyn Roy
Treasurer: Don Budge
Jeff Reid
Doug Holmes
Darryl Spidell
Organist: Jacalyn Roy
Treasurer: Don Budge
Leadership Photos
Administration
Admin Name:
Ms. Jana O’Neil
Admin Position:
Administrative Assistant for the Bishop
Admin Address:
Phone:
Fax:
Admin Email:
Click here to contact Ms. Jana O’Neil
Mailing Address
P.O. Box 567
Sackville NS
B4C 3J1
Sackville NS
B4C 3J1
Driving Directions
Travel/Direction Tips
St. John the Evangelist Church is located in Middle Sackville at 954 Old Sackville Road. St. John’s is situated approximately 25 km from downtown Halifax and is adjacent to Lower Sackville to the east and Upper Sackville to the west. St. John’s is about 5 km from Bedford to the east.
Parking
Please share parking information and/or parking experience!
St John The Evangelist Service Times
Sunday
8:30am Holy Communion
10:30am BAS Holy Communion
Please also see: https://oldstjohnsanglican.com/events-calendar/
It's been more than 5 years since the last service times update. Please make sure to contact the church to confirm service times.
Please contact the church to confirm Service Times or SUBSCRIBE to updates below
8:30am Holy Communion
10:30am BAS Holy Communion
Please also see: https://oldstjohnsanglican.com/events-calendar/
It's been more than 5 years since the last service times update. Please make sure to contact the church to confirm service times.
Please contact the church to confirm Service Times or SUBSCRIBE to updates below
Worship Languages
Dress Code
Sunday School / Children and Youth Activities
Under 12s:
Under 18s:
Local outreach & community activities
Other activities & ministries
Special Needs/Accessibility
Prayers and Hymns
Main Bible:
Hymns and Songs:
Other information
Average Adult Congregation:
Average Youth Congregation:
Additional Info:
Cemetery Committee Al Horwood (865-4449)
Parish Office: (902) 864-3154
Church and Hall: (902) 865-7107
Parish Office: (902) 864-3154
Church and Hall: (902) 865-7107
St John The Evangelist Church Sackville Photos
St John The Evangelist History
A Brief History of The Parish of Sackville, N.S.
Compiled by Darryl Spidell
Halifax was founded on June 21, 1749 by Governor Edward Cornwallis and 2576 settlers. The first ship to anchor in the harbour was the Sphinx. By July 1st the last of the thirteen transports from England with Cornwallis arrived. Halifax was to be a navy and army base to protect the British from the French.
In addition to the fort on Citadel Hill, other defenses were constructed around the newly founded settlement and future capital of the province. In 1749, a barracks was constructed at the head of Bedford Basin. The barracks was called Fort Sackville and the area around the barracks was known as Sackville.
It wasn’t long before settlers built their residences in the Sackville Valley. Many of the early settlers farmed the land in the Sackville Valley.
The present St. John’s Church was built in 1829. It sits on the site of the previous church on top of a hill which is one of the highest points in Sackville. The church is visible as far away as Magazine Hill in Bedford and some claim that St. John’s is even visible from Halifax. There is a question as to how many churches have actually occupied the site over the years – two or three?
The first church may have been built as early as 1790. A Robinson family had settled in the Cornwallis area around 1770 and by 1785 some of the family members settled in Sackville. They had brought materials with them to build a church. John Robinson was granted 200 acres along the Windsor Road (Old Sackville Road). He is buried in St. John’s Cemetery and his son Francis was an active member of the church and helped to construct the present church in 1829.
From the minutes of an old vestry book of November 13, 1830, there is reference made to the church land being conveyed to the parish forty years previously. Tradition has it that the original land may have been given by Godfrey Schultz. However, there was no deed. So the first church may have been built as early as 1790 but the church could have been erected at a later date. This only shows that there was a need for a church as early as 1790.
The Bishop kept an accurate diary of his travels throughout the diocese but he never made mention of there being a church in Sackville before 1807. The Bishop does mention frequently passing through Sackville. Only thirteen householders are included on the Sackville Road assessment roll for 1792. This does not seem to be a very high number of people to support a church.
The boundaries for the township and Parish of Sackville were established on May 19, 1904 at a Legislative Council meeting of the Nova Scotia Government. The Parish of Sackville originally laid out by the legislative council was quite large. It included Lower, Middle and Upper Sackville, Hammonds Plains, Beaver Bank, Bedford, Waverley, Fall River, Birch Cove, Rockingham, Fairview, Nine Mile River, part of the Parish of Rawdon and the Parish of Lantz as far as the head of Grand Lake.
It seems likely that the first St. John’s Church was erected in 1805 and the Rev. Benjamin Gerrish Gray was appointed minister in 1806 by the SPG (Society for the Propagation of the Gospel) on the recommendation of Bishop Charles Inglis. He arrived in 1807 and lived in a farm house near the junction of the Windsor Road and the Waverley Road, close to where the present Bedford Baptist Church is. The Parish of Sackville received a grant of £250 from the Arms Fund in 1812. Three hundred pounds was needed to complete the church. Fifty pounds was to be provided by the congregation.
The first recorded vestry meeting at St. John’s happened on April 12, 1819 (Easter Monday) and Rev. Jerome Alley was the chairman. He signed his name to the minutes as Jerome Alley Miƒsionary. It was quite common for the annual meeting and usually the only meeting of the year, to be held on Easter Monday.
At the vestry meeting on August 25, 1821, it was “resolved that the pews in this church be let and the rent paid quarterly.” There appears to have been 21 pews. Pew 4 and 15 were not on the list as being rented. The pew for the church warden was number one. It appears that the rent was based on the number of family members.
St. John’s Church was not consecrated by Bishop John Inglis until Sunday, September 3, 1827. Just over a year later, on November 18, 1828, St. John’s burned to the ground. People were gathered for a church service. The sexton may have placed some wood chips on the front of the stove to dry and they caught fire. Another story tells that the sexton had brought hot coals from home to start the fire. One of the coals may have fallen onto some flammable materials which later ignited.
A new church was begun almost right away. Even though it was not completed, the new building was being used for worship during the summer of 1829. It appears that the church was built by only three men. Within a year the new church was paid for but there is no mention in the minutes how the money was raised. The Bishop, the Rt. Rev. John Inglis, consecrated the present church on November 28, 1830. He was the son of the first bishop, Rt. Rev. Charles Inglis.
The design of St. John’s is considered to be Georgian. It is similar in style to St. Paul’s in Halifax or the Church of St. John at Cornwallis. The rectangular plan is simple with a simple pitched roof. The vestibule and chancel are similar but smaller copies of the nave which brings a unity to the whole building. The steeple has a square tower, with an octagonal belfry and a tall, slender spire. Most of the windows have gothic arches.
It is not known why the main door to St. John’s faces away from the Old Sackville Road. It has been suggested that the road may have at one time passed in front of the church on the west side. Nothing in the early records and maps indicate that this was so. The probable explanation is that early Christians built their churches so that the congregation, altar, chancel, and even the interred, faced east towards the holy lands.
The Church seems to have made much progress during the rectorship of Rev. Archibald Gray. Mission churches began within the Parish. Church services were started in Hammonds Plains in about 1839. A small church, St. John’s, was consecrated on May 28, 1843 by Bishop Inglis. This building was replaced and renamed St. Nicholas in 1890. It was consecrated in 1891.
The Parish of Sackville possessed glebe lands near Pictou and was first mentioned in the records in 1847. The lands were taken over by squatters and the government gave the church other wood land located near Stewiacke. This land was later sold.
In 1859, the parishioners abandoned the idea of building a parsonage (rectory) for the rector. Instead they bought a residence and about two hundred and fifty acres of land at a good price.
The Deed of Conveyance for church land at Bedford was registered in Halifax on September 16, 1866. Soon after, Bedford had its own church services and the Bedford congregation was asked to pay towards the rector’s salary and other expenses of the parish. The vestry minutes shows that The Church of All Saints in Bedford was in use as of April 6, 1876.
During Rev. Smith’s stay in the Parish, church services were held in Beaver Bank. A Grove family had moved out from Halifax and they operated a girl’s school which was run by the four spinster sisters. One of the sisters played the organ at S. John’s Church. The church services may have been held in the Grove’s living room around the year 1870. The first Good Shepherd Church was built in 1886. It was consecrated on June 17, 1890.
The Parish of Sackville flourished again during Rev. William Elis’ stay. A new rectory was built in 1881. The Ladies Guild was formed in 1884. In 1886 a parish room was built on to the rectory. Meetings and church suppers were held in the parish room. In 1887 the rental of pews was abolished and the envelope system of collecting income was introduced. St. John’s was restored in 1891. A chancel was added to the church and a “heating apparatus” was installed in the “basement”. The three decker pulpit and box pews were removed. The doors from the pews now form the paneling around the chancel. After Rev. Elis left the Parish, the choir moved to the chancel from the gallery. New windows were installed and the steeple was repaired.
On October 22, 1912, while Rev. G. M. Ambrose was rector, Bedford, Waverley and Windsor Junction became a separate parish. Rev. Arthur Tyers was rector from 1919 – 1946 and was the longest serving minister for the Parish of Sackville. His incumbency provided much stability for the Parish and it was during his time that Sackville began to change from a rural community to a suburban community. It was in 1934 that a new rectory was constructed to replace the previous one. Rev. Tyers and Rev. William Elis are both buried in St. John’s Cemetery.
In 1959 St. John’s Church was raised and a foundation was installed under it. This provided space for the Sunday School, Church suppers and meetings. The chancel was renovated in 1971 and the choir was moved back up into the gallery.
The population of Sackville is now around 60,000 people, compared to the original thirteen pioneer families in 1792. The new Parish of St. Francis by the Lakes in Lower Sackville was established in 1975.
St. John’s built a new Parish hall in 1978 to accommodate the growing Sunday School and to provide facilities for parish functions and community groups. Some parishioners believed that if a new church was needed in the future, it could be built on top of the hall.
On May 3, 1898 St. John’s Church was designated a “Municipal Heritage Site.” It is the oldest building in the Sackville area. The most recent restructuring of the Parish occurred on January 1, 2000, when St. John’s Church in Sackville, St. Nicholas Church in Hammonds Plains and the Church of the Good Shepherd in Beaver Bank each became separate, independent parishes. During this restructuring, much of the Parish lands were sold and the money divided among the three new parishes.
Past Rectors Rev. Benjamin Gerrish Gray, D.D 1806 – 1818 Rev. Jerome Alley, D.D 1819 – 1820 Rev. Cyrus Perkins 1820 – 1821 Rev. Thomas H. C. Parsons 1821 – 1824 Rev. John Conolly 1828 – 1832 Rev. Archibald Gray 1833 – 1851 Rev. Thomas Maynard 1851 – 1856 Rev. John G. Mulholland 1857 Rev. John Heatherington Drumm, M.D. 1857 – 1858 Rev. Walter S. Gray, B.A. 1858 Rev. Edwin Gilpin, D.D. 1858 Rev. William Rupert Cochran, D.D. 1858 – 1863 Rev. J. S. Smith 1863 – 1873 Rev. W. E. Wilson 1874 – 1876 Rev. William Ellis 1876 – 1892 Rev. A. T. Tucker 1893 – 1896 Rev. N. Reginald Raven 1896 – 1897 Rev. R. F. Dixon 1898 – 1899 Rev. T. P. W. Thorman 1899 – 1900 Rev. V. E. Harris 1901 – 1910 Rev. George M. Ambrose 1910 – 1913 Rev. C. H. Fletcher 1913 – 1919 Rev. Arthur H. Tyers 1919 – 1946 Rev. Harry E. Langwith 1946 – 1949 Rev. B. J. Davis 1949 – 1956 Rev. Karl Harrington Tufts 1956 – 1967 Rev. Ronald Francis Parsons 1967 – 1970 Rev. Beverley Cecil Strople 1970 – 1980 Rev. Brian A. Burrows 1980 – 1988 Rev. Arthur James “Calvin” Pretty 1988 – 1996 Rev. Ronald Wayne Cutler 1996 – 2008 Rev. Sandra Hounsell-Drover 2009 – 2013 Rev. Norma Mitchell 2013 – present
In addition to the fort on Citadel Hill, other defenses were constructed around the newly founded settlement and future capital of the province. In 1749, a barracks was constructed at the head of Bedford Basin. The barracks was called Fort Sackville and the area around the barracks was known as Sackville.
It wasn’t long before settlers built their residences in the Sackville Valley. Many of the early settlers farmed the land in the Sackville Valley.
The present St. John’s Church was built in 1829. It sits on the site of the previous church on top of a hill which is one of the highest points in Sackville. The church is visible as far away as Magazine Hill in Bedford and some claim that St. John’s is even visible from Halifax. There is a question as to how many churches have actually occupied the site over the years – two or three?
From the minutes of an old vestry book of November 13, 1830, there is reference made to the church land being conveyed to the parish forty years previously. Tradition has it that the original land may have been given by Godfrey Schultz. However, there was no deed. So the first church may have been built as early as 1790 but the church could have been erected at a later date. This only shows that there was a need for a church as early as 1790.
The Bishop kept an accurate diary of his travels throughout the diocese but he never made mention of there being a church in Sackville before 1807. The Bishop does mention frequently passing through Sackville. Only thirteen householders are included on the Sackville Road assessment roll for 1792. This does not seem to be a very high number of people to support a church.
It seems likely that the first St. John’s Church was erected in 1805 and the Rev. Benjamin Gerrish Gray was appointed minister in 1806 by the SPG (Society for the Propagation of the Gospel) on the recommendation of Bishop Charles Inglis. He arrived in 1807 and lived in a farm house near the junction of the Windsor Road and the Waverley Road, close to where the present Bedford Baptist Church is. The Parish of Sackville received a grant of £250 from the Arms Fund in 1812. Three hundred pounds was needed to complete the church. Fifty pounds was to be provided by the congregation.
At the vestry meeting on August 25, 1821, it was “resolved that the pews in this church be let and the rent paid quarterly.” There appears to have been 21 pews. Pew 4 and 15 were not on the list as being rented. The pew for the church warden was number one. It appears that the rent was based on the number of family members.
St. John’s Church was not consecrated by Bishop John Inglis until Sunday, September 3, 1827. Just over a year later, on November 18, 1828, St. John’s burned to the ground. People were gathered for a church service. The sexton may have placed some wood chips on the front of the stove to dry and they caught fire. Another story tells that the sexton had brought hot coals from home to start the fire. One of the coals may have fallen onto some flammable materials which later ignited.
The design of St. John’s is considered to be Georgian. It is similar in style to St. Paul’s in Halifax or the Church of St. John at Cornwallis. The rectangular plan is simple with a simple pitched roof. The vestibule and chancel are similar but smaller copies of the nave which brings a unity to the whole building. The steeple has a square tower, with an octagonal belfry and a tall, slender spire. Most of the windows have gothic arches.
It is not known why the main door to St. John’s faces away from the Old Sackville Road. It has been suggested that the road may have at one time passed in front of the church on the west side. Nothing in the early records and maps indicate that this was so. The probable explanation is that early Christians built their churches so that the congregation, altar, chancel, and even the interred, faced east towards the holy lands.
The Parish of Sackville possessed glebe lands near Pictou and was first mentioned in the records in 1847. The lands were taken over by squatters and the government gave the church other wood land located near Stewiacke. This land was later sold.
In 1859, the parishioners abandoned the idea of building a parsonage (rectory) for the rector. Instead they bought a residence and about two hundred and fifty acres of land at a good price.
The Deed of Conveyance for church land at Bedford was registered in Halifax on September 16, 1866. Soon after, Bedford had its own church services and the Bedford congregation was asked to pay towards the rector’s salary and other expenses of the parish. The vestry minutes shows that The Church of All Saints in Bedford was in use as of April 6, 1876.
The Parish of Sackville flourished again during Rev. William Elis’ stay. A new rectory was built in 1881. The Ladies Guild was formed in 1884. In 1886 a parish room was built on to the rectory. Meetings and church suppers were held in the parish room. In 1887 the rental of pews was abolished and the envelope system of collecting income was introduced. St. John’s was restored in 1891. A chancel was added to the church and a “heating apparatus” was installed in the “basement”. The three decker pulpit and box pews were removed. The doors from the pews now form the paneling around the chancel. After Rev. Elis left the Parish, the choir moved to the chancel from the gallery. New windows were installed and the steeple was repaired.
In 1959 St. John’s Church was raised and a foundation was installed under it. This provided space for the Sunday School, Church suppers and meetings. The chancel was renovated in 1971 and the choir was moved back up into the gallery.
The population of Sackville is now around 60,000 people, compared to the original thirteen pioneer families in 1792. The new Parish of St. Francis by the Lakes in Lower Sackville was established in 1975.
St. John’s built a new Parish hall in 1978 to accommodate the growing Sunday School and to provide facilities for parish functions and community groups. Some parishioners believed that if a new church was needed in the future, it could be built on top of the hall.
Past Rectors Rev. Benjamin Gerrish Gray, D.D 1806 – 1818 Rev. Jerome Alley, D.D 1819 – 1820 Rev. Cyrus Perkins 1820 – 1821 Rev. Thomas H. C. Parsons 1821 – 1824 Rev. John Conolly 1828 – 1832 Rev. Archibald Gray 1833 – 1851 Rev. Thomas Maynard 1851 – 1856 Rev. John G. Mulholland 1857 Rev. John Heatherington Drumm, M.D. 1857 – 1858 Rev. Walter S. Gray, B.A. 1858 Rev. Edwin Gilpin, D.D. 1858 Rev. William Rupert Cochran, D.D. 1858 – 1863 Rev. J. S. Smith 1863 – 1873 Rev. W. E. Wilson 1874 – 1876 Rev. William Ellis 1876 – 1892 Rev. A. T. Tucker 1893 – 1896 Rev. N. Reginald Raven 1896 – 1897 Rev. R. F. Dixon 1898 – 1899 Rev. T. P. W. Thorman 1899 – 1900 Rev. V. E. Harris 1901 – 1910 Rev. George M. Ambrose 1910 – 1913 Rev. C. H. Fletcher 1913 – 1919 Rev. Arthur H. Tyers 1919 – 1946 Rev. Harry E. Langwith 1946 – 1949 Rev. B. J. Davis 1949 – 1956 Rev. Karl Harrington Tufts 1956 – 1967 Rev. Ronald Francis Parsons 1967 – 1970 Rev. Beverley Cecil Strople 1970 – 1980 Rev. Brian A. Burrows 1980 – 1988 Rev. Arthur James “Calvin” Pretty 1988 – 1996 Rev. Ronald Wayne Cutler 1996 – 2008 Rev. Sandra Hounsell-Drover 2009 – 2013 Rev. Norma Mitchell 2013 – present
St John The Evangelist Historical Photos
We need passion
We need passion in our faith! Instead of praying, 'If I should die before I wake', we should pray, 'Lord wake me up before I die!'
We need passion in our faith! Instead of praying, 'If I should die before I wake', we should pray, 'Lord wake me up before I die!'
St John The Evangelist listing was last updated on the 5th of August, 2019