Introducing the Presbyterian Church Heritage Centre in Carlisle of North Middlesex

Introducing the Presbyterian Church Heritage Centre in Carlisle of North Middlesex

By Ian Mason, published in the Middlesex Banner, May 2026. Plan to do the North Middlesex Day Trip June 12, 2026 – link here

             Nestled in the cemetery in the hamlet of Carlisle, 6 kms east of Ailsa Craig, is the Presbyterian Church Heritage Centre (PCHC).  It contains the national collection of artefacts from various congregations of The Presbyterian Church in Canada from coast to coast.  We are the only historic mainline denomination in Canada that preserves a collection of its artefacts.  There are a few church museums throughout Canada, but they pertain to a specific church, rather than its denomination.

             A common question is, “so what does the Presbyterian Church Heritage Centre collect?  Bibles and crosses?”

             Bibles, “yes”; crosses “mostly no.” More about that later.

             In 2018, the National Presbyterian Museum in St. John’s Presbyterian Church, Toronto closed.  The Museum was obliged to leave what had been our host church since 2002 when the church was sold to a developer which will eventually convert the church into condominiums, providing a small area for the congregation to continue to meet.

             Curator Ian Mason began a 5-year search for a church which would be willing to host the collection of artefacts relevant to the history of The Presbyterian Church in Canada (PCC).  These items help to tell the stories of those who worshipped and served Jesus Christ within the context of the PCC.  Prior to the formation of the United Church of Canada in 1925 – into which 2/3 of the Presbyterian Church amalgamated – the PCC was the largest Protestant denomination in Canada.

             The Curator made a cold call to Carlisle United Church asking the congregation if they would be interested in hosting a collection of artefacts.  And, he added, “if you are interested in hosting this collection, you would have to give up your sanctuary and move to the basement.”

             He had his answer in 3 seconds, “yes, we would be willing to do that.”

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The Treasured Family Archive Arrives

The Treasured Family Archive Arrives

May 12, 2026 – The Treasure Arrives

Glencoe Archives – Amy, great great granddaughter of Mrs. John “Alberta” McFarlane of R.R. #4, Appin, arrived Tuesday with her great grandmother, Caroline Gough, and grandmother, Betty Ann Gough, to deliver the Bertie Fonds. Here is Amy, a fourth year Western student headed into Library and Archive Science, descibing the significance of these scrapbooks.

This generous donation reminds us how essential it is to care for our family archives. These homegrown collections deserve professional preservation, cataloguing, and digitization so that families, genealogists, and historians alike can continue to piece together the stories that define who we are.

L-R Back – Gerry Cross, Norm McGll, Ken Beecroft, Amy, Harold Carruthers, Marilyn McCallum. L-R Front: Caroline Gough, Betty Ann Carr.

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