The Presbyterian College, Montreal
From Biocrawler, the free encyclopedia.
The Presbyterian College/Le College Presbyterien,
3495 University Avenue, Montreal, Quebec, is a Theological College of the Presbyterian Church in Canada, and is affiliated with McGill University through their Faculty of Divinity.
The official history of the college began in the early 1860s, but the date of 1865 is the benchmark as the Canada Presbyterian Church approved the request of the Presbytery, to compliment the denomination's only Theological College of Knox College, located in Toronto.
Lay leadership in this cause came from prominant Montrealers John Redpath and McGill Principal John William Dawson.
Classes began in the autumn of 1867 in the basement of Erskine Presbyterian Church in downtown Monreal, with Professor (later Principal) Donald Harvey MacVicar. The first building was completed in 1873, and located on McTavish Street. In 1882, the David Morrice Hall containing a large library, Dining Hall, Convocation Hall and offices and residences was completed. These building served the College unitl the 1950s.
In 1890, one of the Presbyterian College's most famous alumni graduated, in the person of James Naismith. He did not go to a congregation; instead, he went to serve with the YMCA in the United States. His invention of the sport of basketball, brought him back to Montreal, just before his 1939 death to receive the Honourary Doctor of Divinity.
The College remained within the Presbyterian Church in Canada after church union, although most of the faculty departed. The 1925-1926 academic year was held from the Anglican Diocesian College, until the provincial Quebec Courts awarded the College back to the "continuing" Presbyterians.
During World War II, Presbyterian College was used for soldier training, and temporarily moved to Toronto, Ontario, and joined with Knox College, from 1943-1946.
Bn the 1950s, the older buildings were in need of repair; rather than embarking on lengthy renovations, Presbyterian College and McGill University transferred lands, the University took the McTavish Street site, and Presbyterian College constructed a new building on the corner of University Avenue and Milton Street, just north of Sherbrooke Street, and adjacent to aforementioned Diocesian College. The building was dedicated on April 28, 1963. The chapel, was renovated in the 1980s, then rebuilt following a fire in the 1990s.
In 1969, Presbyterian College entered into an agreement with McGill University Faculty of Divinity and the other Theological Colleges (United College and Diocesian College), that renewed an agreement made in 1912, that was dissolved following 1925. In 1981, L'Institute de Theologie de Montreal was established, to provide teaching in French, although French courses had been provided from 1869-1925, and the College is known as The Presbyterian College/Le College Presbyterien.
Presbyterian College's Student base is from right across Canada, as well as from international students.
Keith Markell's 1986 (posthumous) history of Presbyterian College cited some famous alumni; Most were in Canadian Church circles, including the first Moderator of the United Church of Canada, George C. Pidgeon. Another alumnus, who like James Naismith (see above), gained a reputation away from the pastorate and/or academia, was John Weir Foote (1934 Graduate), a heroic World War II Chaplain, and later politican.
Principals:
+Donald Harvey MacVicar* (1873-1902),
+John Scrimger* (1904-1915),
+D.H. Fraser (1916-1929),
+Francis Scott MacKenzie (1929-1945),
+Robert Lennox (1948-1969),
+William Klempa (1978-1998),
+John A. Vissers (1999-),
During the periods between settled Principals (especially 1969-1978), there were a number of "Acting Principals".
external link:
Presbyterian College Website [[1] (http://www.presbyteriancollege.ca)]
Sources:
- Robert Campbell, A History of the St. Gabriel Street Church, Montreal, 1887.
- John H. MacVicar, The Life of Principal MacVicar, by His Son, 1904.
- H. Keith Markell, the History of the Presbyterian College Montreal, 1865-1986.
- John. S. Moir, Enduring Witness, (Third Edition), 2004.
The Official History of the Presbyterian Church in Canada

