Congregational Church in Canada
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Online Records
- 1621-1968 Quebec, Canada, Vital and Church Records (Drouin Collection), 1621-1968, index & images ($). Can be used free-of-charge at a FamilySearch Center.
- 1642-1967 Quebec index to civil copy of church records, 1642-1902, digitized, browsable index.
- 1763-1967 Quebec, non-Catholic parish registers, 1763-1967, images only.
The term Congregationalist dates from 1642 when it was applied to the followers of Robert Brown, who about 1580 had formulated a new belief in independent groups or congregations governing themselves and following their individual convictions. The tenets and habits were closely allied to the Baptists and Disciples. The sect was never large and came to Canada about 1820. In 1907, the Congregationalists in Canada joined with the United Brethren in Christ, and in 1925 they all amalgamated with the United Church of Canada. Any surviving former Congregational churches will now be United, and there may be information or registers at the appropriate United Church Archives.
- See, A complete list of churches is available in “The Congregational Church in Canada: a historical and statistical summary,” by Douglas Walkington (unpublished thesis, 1979, available at the United Church of Canada archives in Toronto).
- Go to United Church of Canada for all genealogical information.