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St. George's Church
Haliburton
ON
K0M 1S0
- Anglican Churches in Haliburton, ON
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Who we are
We are part of the Anglican Diocese of Toronto and the Anglican Church of Canada.
The Primate’s World Relief and Development Fund (PWRDF) is the Anglican Church of Canada’s agency for relief and sustainable development.
Globally, we are part of the worldwide Anglican Communion.
The Canadian Bible Society is a great organization we support and recommend.
The Primate’s World Relief and Development Fund (PWRDF) is the Anglican Church of Canada’s agency for relief and sustainable development.
Globally, we are part of the worldwide Anglican Communion.
The Canadian Bible Society is a great organization we support and recommend.
Church Address
617 Mountain Street
Haliburton,
ON
K0M 1S0
Canada
Phone: 705 457 2074
Fax: 705 457 9618
Download St. George's Church vCard with Service Times
Church Pastor
The Reverend Dr. Connie Phillipson
Interim Priest-in-Charge
617 Mountain Street
Haliburton,
ON
K0M 1S0
Canada
Phone: 705 457 2074
Fax: 705 457 9618
Download Interim Priest-in-Charge The Reverend Dr. Connie Phillipson vCard with Bio
Quote of the Day
1 John 4:7
Beloved, let us love one another: for love is of God; and every one that loveth is born of God, and knoweth God.
Beloved, let us love one another: for love is of God; and every one that loveth is born of God, and knoweth God.
Denomination
Anglican Church
Anglican Churches in Haliburton, Ontario, Canada
Anglican Churches in Ontario, Canada
Anglican Churches in Canada
All churches in Haliburton, ON
Affiliations:
Website:
Social Media
St. George's Church Haliburton on YouTube
Leadership
Leader Name:
The Reverend Dr. Connie Phillipson
Leader Position:
Interim Priest-in-Charge
Formal Title:
Leader Address:
Tel:
Fax:
705 457 9618
Leader Email:
Leader Bio:
Reverend Connie has worshiped and led services in the Parish over the years and has experienced the beauty of the Haliburton Highlands since childhood.
She was ordained to the priesthood in the Diocese of Niagara in December, 2012. During her theological studies at Wycliffe College, she served at the Church of St. Mary Magdalene (Toronto) and later as Assistant Curate at St. Mark’s Anglican Church (Orangeville).
Reverend Connie joined the Diocese of Toronto in 2015 and served as the incumbent of the two-point Parish of North Essa from 2015 to 2021.
She completed her doctoral studies during the pandemic. In 2023, she returned to active ministry to lead Sunday services in the Parishes of Mulmur, Tottenham, East Orangeville, Haliburton, and in her former Parish of North Essa.
Prior to her call to ordained ministry, Connie worked for over 30 years in the criminal justice system. She also served as Executive Director to the York Regional Police Services Board from 2000 to 2009.
Connie graduated from the University of Toronto with her Bachelor of Arts, Master of Social Work, Master of Education, and Master of Divinity (Honours) degrees. In 2022, she graduated with her Doctor of Ministry Degree in Preaching from Acadia Divinity College (a Baptist College) in Wolfville, Nova Scotia.
She is excited about her ministry at St. George’s Anglican in the Parish of Haliburton, and invites everyone to come and worship the Lord Jesus Christ.
“This is the day that the Lord has made, so let us rejoice and be glad in it,” she reminds us, quoting Psalm 118:24. “My friends in Christ, come and worship.”
She was ordained to the priesthood in the Diocese of Niagara in December, 2012. During her theological studies at Wycliffe College, she served at the Church of St. Mary Magdalene (Toronto) and later as Assistant Curate at St. Mark’s Anglican Church (Orangeville).
Reverend Connie joined the Diocese of Toronto in 2015 and served as the incumbent of the two-point Parish of North Essa from 2015 to 2021.
She completed her doctoral studies during the pandemic. In 2023, she returned to active ministry to lead Sunday services in the Parishes of Mulmur, Tottenham, East Orangeville, Haliburton, and in her former Parish of North Essa.
Prior to her call to ordained ministry, Connie worked for over 30 years in the criminal justice system. She also served as Executive Director to the York Regional Police Services Board from 2000 to 2009.
Connie graduated from the University of Toronto with her Bachelor of Arts, Master of Social Work, Master of Education, and Master of Divinity (Honours) degrees. In 2022, she graduated with her Doctor of Ministry Degree in Preaching from Acadia Divinity College (a Baptist College) in Wolfville, Nova Scotia.
She is excited about her ministry at St. George’s Anglican in the Parish of Haliburton, and invites everyone to come and worship the Lord Jesus Christ.
“This is the day that the Lord has made, so let us rejoice and be glad in it,” she reminds us, quoting Psalm 118:24. “My friends in Christ, come and worship.”
Other Church Leaders:
The Reverend Dr. Connie Phillipson on Social Media:
St. George's Church Leadership Photos
Administration
Admin Name:
Ms. Angie Garot
Admin Position:
Office Administrator
Admin Address:
Telephone:
Fax:
705 457 9618
Admin Email:
Mailing Address
P.O. Box 92
Haliburton, ON
K0M 1S0
Haliburton, ON
K0M 1S0
Driving Directions to St. George's Church
Travel/Directions Tips
Parking
St. George's Church Haliburton Service Times
Holy Eucharist: 10:30 a.m. each Sunday @ St. George’s
All welcome to stay for refreshments and fellowship afterwards!
You can watch each Sunday service as it happens via the livestream below, or later at your convenience. You can also find services on the church YouTube channel (HALIBURTON ANGLICAN).
Service Times last updated on the 8th of December, 2024
All welcome to stay for refreshments and fellowship afterwards!
You can watch each Sunday service as it happens via the livestream below, or later at your convenience. You can also find services on the church YouTube channel (HALIBURTON ANGLICAN).
Service Times last updated on the 8th of December, 2024
Worship Languages
Dress code:
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:
St. George's Church Photo Gallery
St. George's Church History
St. George’s Anglican Church, Haliburton:
Heart and Soul of a Community
Leo Dobrzensky wrote the following for the 150th anniversary of St. George’s, in 2014. An amazing woman who came to Canada in 1948 as a refugee from Czechoslovakia, she lived many more productive years in her adopted homeland. She died in March 2021 in her 95th year
150 years ago, the sound of axes rang through the deep seclusion of the virgin forest, where solitude had reigned for centuries.
On May 9, 1864, an agreement between the Crown and The Canadian Land and Emigration Company of London, England was reached and the planned agricultural settlement of Dysart began. Terms for buyers stipulated there be one bona fide settler for every 200 acres of land. Ten acres were to be cleared and planted in crops for every 100 acres, and a house built, at least 16 by 20 feet, for every 200 acres.
On December 8 during the sawmill’s opening, Mr. C.R. Stewart, the company’s agent, briefed the 27 first settlers on the Land Company’s progress. A road was being built to link the Bobcaygeon and Peterson colonization roads, which would reach the projected village of Haliburton in 1865 and make transportation a little easier.
A 16-by-24-foot log building, the first St. George’s Anglican Church, had just been constructed on company land on a beautiful site, between the road in progress and Head Lake. Two hundred acres were set aside on the north shore of the lake, where the congregation planned to build a parsonage at a later date. The company was prepared to contribute 50 pounds toward the support of a clergyman, and offered the storekeeper’s house on Lot 1 Concession V as a residence to a prospective incumbent.
John Strachan, Lord Bishop of Toronto, was sending the Rev. Sandars to the “remote Township of Dysart” to open the church for service on Christmas Day. A few days before, heavy snowstorms blanketed the province and so postponed the opening until January 1, 1865. To complete the journey, which he undertook on behalf of the mission church, the Rev. Sandars held two meetings with Anglican residents at Gull River settlements in Minden and Stanhope. All were anxious to obtain church services and willing to contribute to the support of a clergyman.
In his report, the parson expressed the hope that the board would overcome its “usual complacency” toward remote portions of the diocese and send a clergyman as soon as possible. He also suggested the following schedule of services: every alternate Sunday morning in Minden, with an afternoon service in Stanhope; on the other Sunday, services in Dysart. The proposed residence, 5.5 miles south of Haliburton and within 12.5 miles of the Minden schoolhouse where services were held, seemed the ideal solution to Sandars, but not to the Rev. Frederick Burt, the clergyman from Huntingdon, Quebec appointed to the incumbency. In July 1865, the company’s agent went down the lakes to meet the parson. Mr. Burt gave his first service on Sunday July 23.
The Burts stayed in the Company House for less than four months during which the Anglican minister also taught the settlers’ children at his residence. Sometime in November 1865, the couple moved to Minden, where the Rev. Burt established St. Paul’s Church and served as minister until 1877. St. George’s congregation then had to wait until 1869 for another resident clergyman.
First services were read by surveyor Miles, while Dr. Peake, a surgeon just out of England, led the choir with an accordion, mounted on a little frame and worked with a treadle. The doctor could only play two tunes: the Evening Hymn and the March of the Men of Harlech, and both were utilized in a rather miscellaneous manner. However, the services were altogether satisfactory and attended by settlers of all denominations and creeds. A Sunday school was opened at an early period. Before the arrival of a permanent clergyman and during the summer months, student ministers performed services at St. George’s. (1)
Considering the hardship most settlers had to endure, in the very early years they still managed to find some extra cash to help support missionaries, widows and orphans.
In 1869, an incumbency of the Church of England in Haliburton was finally and permanently established. The Reverend Gaden Crawford MacKenzie and his family arrived in March that year. The Land Company, which paid half of his stipend, provided the parson with a residence. A year later, a building boom allowed him to build a new church in Haliburton.
Designed by Peterborough architect and engineer J.E. Belcher (who drew the plans free of charge) parishioner and carpenter Henry Wesley became the contractor for the new Gothic style church. Wesley built the frame structure, a model of craftsmanship, for $700.00—even then considered a low price.
Mrs. Haliburton, widow of the judge after whom the village is named, presented the church with a cabinet organ and promised to send a bell. The Rev. Mackenzie was able to secure so many donations from outside sources that the church and furnishings were entirely paid for. The Dysart congregation could then enjoy its new place of worship for half a century without having to worry about fund raising.
Unfortunately, a fire destroyed the beloved building on the morning of January 25, 1920. (2) The present church, a brick structure similar in design, opened its doors October 23, 1923.
A brick parsonage was added in 1899. It was built by carpenter William Prust, a warden and auditor at St George’s who later moved to Toronto, where he became a popular builder.
In the 1870s, the Haliburton congregation grew in size, and a mission point of St. George’s for West Dysart, the Church of the Ascension, was established. It was built on land donated by U.S.-born John Strain on the Haliburton Road South. The church had a large congregation and sent its own delegate to the synod. It burnt down, sometime in the 1920s or 30s and today, no trace of it remains.
From the earliest days until now, St. George’s has been noted for exceptional hospitality. In the early years, Christmas parties featured coveted toys for each child. Good music with an outstanding choir, many community and charitable activities—and of course the famous annual Shrove Tuesday Pancake Supper—have long been hallmarks of St. George's.
For these and many other activities over its 150 years, the church has truly been the heart and soul of Haliburton.
© Leopolda z L. Dobrzensky
1 H.R. Cummings, "Early Days in Haliburton"
2 Nila Reynolds, "In Quest of Yesterday"
Clergy of St. George's Church, Haliburton
Rev. Frederick Burt 1865-1869
Rev. Gordon MacKenzie 1869-1870
Rev. William Clark 1870-1874
Rev. William Jupp 1874-1877
Rev. George Ledingham 1877-1884
Rev. Henry Heaton 1885-1886
Rev. William Farncomb 1886-1896
Rev. Frederick Shepherd 1896-1899
Rev. Maurice Goodheart 1899-1901
Rev. John Lindsay 1901-1909
Rev. Pierre De Lom 1910-1918
Piran Roberts 1909-1910
Rev. Richard Forde 1912-1913
Rev. Henry Bracken 1913-1918
George Bemister 1918-1919
Rev. Arthur Whatham 1919-1921
Rev. Clarence Eakins 1925-1926
Rev. William Burns 1926
Rev. Thomas Butler 1926-1930
Rev. Robert Shires 1930-1933
Rev. Herbert Archibold 1933-1935
Rev. James Stringer 1921-1925 and 1935-1936
Rev. Herbert Battersby 1936-1941
Rev. Ivan Smith 1941-1944
Rev. Reginald Kerr 1944-1950
Rev. Merrill Cathcart 1950-1954
Rev. James O'Neil 1954-1957
Rev. David McGuire 1957-1959
Rev. John Taylor 1959-1962
Rev. Ray Carder 1962-1969
Rev. Frank Ford 1969-1973
Rev. Robert Kasurak 1973-1974
Rev. Trevor Denny 1975-1982
Rev. John Phillips 1982-1991
Rev. Christopher Greaves 1992-2004
Rev. Faun Harriman 2005-2009
Rev. Anne Moore 2009-2017
Rev. David Barker (interim priest) 2017-2018
Rev. Ken McClure 2018-2021
Rev. David Barker (interim priest) 2022-
Heart and Soul of a Community
Leo Dobrzensky wrote the following for the 150th anniversary of St. George’s, in 2014. An amazing woman who came to Canada in 1948 as a refugee from Czechoslovakia, she lived many more productive years in her adopted homeland. She died in March 2021 in her 95th year
150 years ago, the sound of axes rang through the deep seclusion of the virgin forest, where solitude had reigned for centuries.
On May 9, 1864, an agreement between the Crown and The Canadian Land and Emigration Company of London, England was reached and the planned agricultural settlement of Dysart began. Terms for buyers stipulated there be one bona fide settler for every 200 acres of land. Ten acres were to be cleared and planted in crops for every 100 acres, and a house built, at least 16 by 20 feet, for every 200 acres.
On December 8 during the sawmill’s opening, Mr. C.R. Stewart, the company’s agent, briefed the 27 first settlers on the Land Company’s progress. A road was being built to link the Bobcaygeon and Peterson colonization roads, which would reach the projected village of Haliburton in 1865 and make transportation a little easier.
A 16-by-24-foot log building, the first St. George’s Anglican Church, had just been constructed on company land on a beautiful site, between the road in progress and Head Lake. Two hundred acres were set aside on the north shore of the lake, where the congregation planned to build a parsonage at a later date. The company was prepared to contribute 50 pounds toward the support of a clergyman, and offered the storekeeper’s house on Lot 1 Concession V as a residence to a prospective incumbent.
John Strachan, Lord Bishop of Toronto, was sending the Rev. Sandars to the “remote Township of Dysart” to open the church for service on Christmas Day. A few days before, heavy snowstorms blanketed the province and so postponed the opening until January 1, 1865. To complete the journey, which he undertook on behalf of the mission church, the Rev. Sandars held two meetings with Anglican residents at Gull River settlements in Minden and Stanhope. All were anxious to obtain church services and willing to contribute to the support of a clergyman.
In his report, the parson expressed the hope that the board would overcome its “usual complacency” toward remote portions of the diocese and send a clergyman as soon as possible. He also suggested the following schedule of services: every alternate Sunday morning in Minden, with an afternoon service in Stanhope; on the other Sunday, services in Dysart. The proposed residence, 5.5 miles south of Haliburton and within 12.5 miles of the Minden schoolhouse where services were held, seemed the ideal solution to Sandars, but not to the Rev. Frederick Burt, the clergyman from Huntingdon, Quebec appointed to the incumbency. In July 1865, the company’s agent went down the lakes to meet the parson. Mr. Burt gave his first service on Sunday July 23.
The Burts stayed in the Company House for less than four months during which the Anglican minister also taught the settlers’ children at his residence. Sometime in November 1865, the couple moved to Minden, where the Rev. Burt established St. Paul’s Church and served as minister until 1877. St. George’s congregation then had to wait until 1869 for another resident clergyman.
First services were read by surveyor Miles, while Dr. Peake, a surgeon just out of England, led the choir with an accordion, mounted on a little frame and worked with a treadle. The doctor could only play two tunes: the Evening Hymn and the March of the Men of Harlech, and both were utilized in a rather miscellaneous manner. However, the services were altogether satisfactory and attended by settlers of all denominations and creeds. A Sunday school was opened at an early period. Before the arrival of a permanent clergyman and during the summer months, student ministers performed services at St. George’s. (1)
Considering the hardship most settlers had to endure, in the very early years they still managed to find some extra cash to help support missionaries, widows and orphans.
In 1869, an incumbency of the Church of England in Haliburton was finally and permanently established. The Reverend Gaden Crawford MacKenzie and his family arrived in March that year. The Land Company, which paid half of his stipend, provided the parson with a residence. A year later, a building boom allowed him to build a new church in Haliburton.
Designed by Peterborough architect and engineer J.E. Belcher (who drew the plans free of charge) parishioner and carpenter Henry Wesley became the contractor for the new Gothic style church. Wesley built the frame structure, a model of craftsmanship, for $700.00—even then considered a low price.
Mrs. Haliburton, widow of the judge after whom the village is named, presented the church with a cabinet organ and promised to send a bell. The Rev. Mackenzie was able to secure so many donations from outside sources that the church and furnishings were entirely paid for. The Dysart congregation could then enjoy its new place of worship for half a century without having to worry about fund raising.
Unfortunately, a fire destroyed the beloved building on the morning of January 25, 1920. (2) The present church, a brick structure similar in design, opened its doors October 23, 1923.
A brick parsonage was added in 1899. It was built by carpenter William Prust, a warden and auditor at St George’s who later moved to Toronto, where he became a popular builder.
In the 1870s, the Haliburton congregation grew in size, and a mission point of St. George’s for West Dysart, the Church of the Ascension, was established. It was built on land donated by U.S.-born John Strain on the Haliburton Road South. The church had a large congregation and sent its own delegate to the synod. It burnt down, sometime in the 1920s or 30s and today, no trace of it remains.
From the earliest days until now, St. George’s has been noted for exceptional hospitality. In the early years, Christmas parties featured coveted toys for each child. Good music with an outstanding choir, many community and charitable activities—and of course the famous annual Shrove Tuesday Pancake Supper—have long been hallmarks of St. George's.
For these and many other activities over its 150 years, the church has truly been the heart and soul of Haliburton.
© Leopolda z L. Dobrzensky
1 H.R. Cummings, "Early Days in Haliburton"
2 Nila Reynolds, "In Quest of Yesterday"
Clergy of St. George's Church, Haliburton
Rev. Frederick Burt 1865-1869
Rev. Gordon MacKenzie 1869-1870
Rev. William Clark 1870-1874
Rev. William Jupp 1874-1877
Rev. George Ledingham 1877-1884
Rev. Henry Heaton 1885-1886
Rev. William Farncomb 1886-1896
Rev. Frederick Shepherd 1896-1899
Rev. Maurice Goodheart 1899-1901
Rev. John Lindsay 1901-1909
Rev. Pierre De Lom 1910-1918
Piran Roberts 1909-1910
Rev. Richard Forde 1912-1913
Rev. Henry Bracken 1913-1918
George Bemister 1918-1919
Rev. Arthur Whatham 1919-1921
Rev. Clarence Eakins 1925-1926
Rev. William Burns 1926
Rev. Thomas Butler 1926-1930
Rev. Robert Shires 1930-1933
Rev. Herbert Archibold 1933-1935
Rev. James Stringer 1921-1925 and 1935-1936
Rev. Herbert Battersby 1936-1941
Rev. Ivan Smith 1941-1944
Rev. Reginald Kerr 1944-1950
Rev. Merrill Cathcart 1950-1954
Rev. James O'Neil 1954-1957
Rev. David McGuire 1957-1959
Rev. John Taylor 1959-1962
Rev. Ray Carder 1962-1969
Rev. Frank Ford 1969-1973
Rev. Robert Kasurak 1973-1974
Rev. Trevor Denny 1975-1982
Rev. John Phillips 1982-1991
Rev. Christopher Greaves 1992-2004
Rev. Faun Harriman 2005-2009
Rev. Anne Moore 2009-2017
Rev. David Barker (interim priest) 2017-2018
Rev. Ken McClure 2018-2021
Rev. David Barker (interim priest) 2022-
St. George's Church Historical Photos
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