Showing posts with label Hamilton churches. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hamilton churches. Show all posts
04 September, 2015
Hamilton Baptist Church
It seems only natural that the early
Hamilton Baptist Church would conduct its Christmas Day service on a summer
evening in the much-loved Gregson Park. After all, the Church is directly
opposite, at 108 Lindsay Street, where it has been since 1929. Historical
church records refer to this as ‘our tradition.’
26 May, 2015
St Peter's Anglican Church, Hamilton
Hundreds of children were on the march, a
more-or-less orderly line snaking its way from St Peter’s Anglican Church to
Hamilton Station. At the front, two children held a wavering church banner
aloft. They were off to the annual Sunday School picnic at Speers Point, the
highlight of the year.
First, they would catch the train to Cockle
Creek, then a steam tram to Speers Point. The event would have been an exciting
adventure for children whose families did not own cars, and who walked
everywhere within their suburb, Hamilton.
28 January, 2015
Which David Murray was he?
The repetition of given names, especially
naming first born sons after their father or grandfather, is a tradition with
centuries of history behind it. I find it extremely confusing, especially when trying to
understand how the many different Murrays that scatter Hamilton’s history are
connected.
Murray Street, Hamilton runs parallel to
Beaumont Street to its east, neatly truncated at its northern end by Lindsay
Street and south at Denison Street. The Scots Kirk, dedicated in 1887 and
considered one of the finest pieces of church architecture in the Northern
District, occupies the corner of Tudor and Murray Streets. Inside the Kirk are
three stained glass windows – each a memorial to a man with the name David
Murray. Were there three?
29 December, 2013
The story of Donald's Corner
When you were growing up in Hamilton’, I asked memoir writer Margaret Colditz ‘where was the money?’
‘The money’, she responded without a second’s pause, ‘was in Donald’s Corner’.
28 June, 2013
'Blow it up over my dead body!'
'A couple of days after the earthquake, I was at home in the
parsonage in Beaumont Street when there was a knock on the door. I opened it to
a policeman, who told me – the Army is
about to blow up the church. They want you there!'
That was John Mason, Minister of the Hamilton Wesley Church 1985 - 1992.
That was John Mason, Minister of the Hamilton Wesley Church 1985 - 1992.
22 June, 2013
Wesleyans of Pit Town
Pressing his nose against the glass as I hold him up to our
high front window, my three year old grandson stares transfixed at the floodlit
church tower. Springing from the darkness, it’s so close we can almost touch
it, this cake decorator’s fantasy of lacy outlines, turrets and slim arches.
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