Knox Presbyterian church

Description
Media Type
Image
Item Type
Photographs
Description
The current red-brick Gothic style building was dedicated May 20, 1888. It replaced the old frame church, called Oakville Presbyterian Church. The new church had taken a year to build and cost $16,000, a huge amount in those days. To build it, 60 members of the congregation signed a promissory note and the church purchased the White Oak Hotel at the corner of Dunn Street and Colborne Street, later to become Lakeshore Road. The hotel had once been a wild drinking place called O'Reilly's Tavern. A later owner took to keeping a live bear chained up to amuse customers. But Oakville residents voted the town dry in 1881 and by 1887 the owner was willing to sell it to the Presbyterians for $1,600. The old hotel was cut into three sections and moved off the site - one section is still downtown today at 152 Lakeshore Road. A church bell was installed several years later - the exact date is in dispute - cast in New York State. By 1894, a "pedal organ" had been approved, to the consternation of the more conservative members of the church who regarded it as "the devil's instrument."
Date of Publication
28 Jul 2015
Geographic Coverage
  • Knox Presbyterian Church:
    Ontario, Canada
    Latitude: 43.4465815478442 Longitude: -79.666891118927
Donor
Sylvia Jaago
Copyright Statement
Protected by copyright: Uses other than research or private study require the permission of the rightsholder(s). Responsibility for obtaining permissions and for any use rests exclusively with the user.
Contact
Oakville Public Library
Email:oplreference@oakville.ca
Website:

Agency street/mail address:

Oakville Public Library

Central Branch

120 Navy Street

Oakville, ON L6J 2Z4

Tel: (905) 815-2042

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