Three evangelical Protestant denominations, the Anglicans, Methodists and Presbyterians established missions in the Canadian West from 1820 to 1870. Their success was marginal, with no missionary achieving the ultimate goal of self-sufficient and predominantly agricultural communities. Their existence was never more than fragile. Agriculture was retarded, only in a few cases spontaneous, and always ancillary to hunting and "tripping"
John McDougall, John Maclean and Egerton Young were Methodist missionaries among the Indians of Wes...
In 1839 the Hudson's Bay Company invited four Methodist missionaries, James Evans, William Mason, Ro...
The beginnings of the missionary activity of the Presbyterian Church date back to the colonial days ...
This paper seeks to explain the success and failure of Presbyterian missions to Indians in western C...
From 1700 to 1775, some 159 Protestant missionaries attempted to complete the task of civilizing and...
In 1821 Red River was desolate, destitute and barbarous. The uncompromising struggle of the Hudson's...
George McDougall, chairman of the Methodist Missions to the Indians of the Northwest Territories, ke...
This ethnohistorical study examines the emergence of a Church of England, Church Missionary Society ...
In 1879 the buffalo disappeared from the Canadian North-West, leaving the Plains Indians in an extre...
The thesis presents a historical study of Zion Hill, the first Aboriginal Mission in colonial Queens...
From 1896 to 1914, the Canadian prairies experienced a great immigration and expansion of settlement...
Mission efforts in Canada\u27s Midwest played a major part in the development of both the mainline P...
This thesis is a case study of a Victorian missionary in a British Columbia context and focuses prim...
This paper analyzes John Eliot and his missionary efforts in New England, with a special focus on th...
Christianity is an integral aspect of Native history, not simply an external force acting upon it. N...
John McDougall, John Maclean and Egerton Young were Methodist missionaries among the Indians of Wes...
In 1839 the Hudson's Bay Company invited four Methodist missionaries, James Evans, William Mason, Ro...
The beginnings of the missionary activity of the Presbyterian Church date back to the colonial days ...
This paper seeks to explain the success and failure of Presbyterian missions to Indians in western C...
From 1700 to 1775, some 159 Protestant missionaries attempted to complete the task of civilizing and...
In 1821 Red River was desolate, destitute and barbarous. The uncompromising struggle of the Hudson's...
George McDougall, chairman of the Methodist Missions to the Indians of the Northwest Territories, ke...
This ethnohistorical study examines the emergence of a Church of England, Church Missionary Society ...
In 1879 the buffalo disappeared from the Canadian North-West, leaving the Plains Indians in an extre...
The thesis presents a historical study of Zion Hill, the first Aboriginal Mission in colonial Queens...
From 1896 to 1914, the Canadian prairies experienced a great immigration and expansion of settlement...
Mission efforts in Canada\u27s Midwest played a major part in the development of both the mainline P...
This thesis is a case study of a Victorian missionary in a British Columbia context and focuses prim...
This paper analyzes John Eliot and his missionary efforts in New England, with a special focus on th...
Christianity is an integral aspect of Native history, not simply an external force acting upon it. N...
John McDougall, John Maclean and Egerton Young were Methodist missionaries among the Indians of Wes...
In 1839 the Hudson's Bay Company invited four Methodist missionaries, James Evans, William Mason, Ro...
The beginnings of the missionary activity of the Presbyterian Church date back to the colonial days ...