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MacDonald Research Press

Part Four 1842-1854 - St. Raphael's Roman Catholic Parish Registers - Baptisms & Marriages (Glengarry County, Ontario)

Part Four 1842-1854 - St. Raphael's Roman Catholic Parish Registers - Baptisms & Marriages (Glengarry County, Ontario)

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By Duncan (darby) MacDonald U.E.

This is one of several volumes of transcribed parish registers of St. Raphael's Roman Catholic Church in Glengarry, Ontario (scroll down page for list of all volumes). 

Part Four 1842-1854 Baptisms & Marriages includes:

  • Introduction
  • Transcribed Baptisms (organized alphabetically by surname)
  • Transcribed Burials (a few strays) (organized alphabetically by surname)
  • Transcribed Marriages (organized alphabetically by surname)
  • Index (contains a complete index, not just 'others')

Content is organized alphabetically by surname of principal persons in each register. There is also a Complete Index in this volume, not just an Index for "other names".

Details:

250 pages
8.5 X 11"
Originally published by MacDonald Research Centre, Brockville, 1995 on ISBN-0-921133-79-0
This edition published by Global Heritage Press/MacDonald Research Press, Carleton Place, 2010 ISBN13: 978-1-897446-89-8 (soft cover - coil bound)

Links to all Volumes in the St Raphael series:

Brief History of St. Raphael's Church: 

St Raphael's is situated in the former Charlottenburgh Township, now South Glengarry on the seventh concession back from the St Lawrence River. Commenced by Alexander Macdonell, vicar general and future Roman Catholic Bishop of Upper Canada, this large stone church served a congregation of Gaelic-speaking Catholic Highlanders who had settled in the eastern-most county of Upper Canada in 1786. For a time St Raphael's function as the administrative centre of the Roman Catholic Church in Upper Canada and today is recognized as the founding church for the Anglophone Catholics of the province.

The church was constructed during a period when the province was still under the jurisdiction of the Bishop of Quebec, a state of affairs which continued until 1826, when the dioceses was divided and Macdonell became the first Bishop of Kingston (Upper Canada). Evidence of this transitional period in Church history is preserved by Macdonell's plan for St Raphael's, which resembles the cruciform design developed by Abbe Pierre Conefroy and popular in Lower Canada from 1812 to 1830.

Throughout the early 19th century, St Raphael's constituted the largest parish of Roman Catholics in the colony. Its significance was reflected not only in the size of the church but also in the educational buildings that were associated with it. These included a large stone presbytery which Macdonell built for his own use in 1808 and which served from 1817 as a boys' school; a single story building which once housed the former College of Iona, a seminary established by Macdonell to train young men for the priesthood; and a school building for girls of the parish (since demolished). These were among the first Roman Catholic educational institutions in the province. Macdonell's account book indicates that payment for the first load of cut stone was made through the building contractor and master mason, Archibald Fraser, in the spring of 1816.

In 1970 a fire destroyed St Raphael's roof, its 1830's tower and all of its interior decorations. Fortunately the outer walls were spared and thus its plan, its impressive scale and its fine masonry work - three physical characteristics of Macdonell's church - remain. The parishioners of St Raphael's decided to preserve the ruin and build an unobtrusive modern church against its southwest corner. The original structure was designated as Heritage property 1974 under the Ontario Heritage Act and an Ontario Heritage Foundation Grant supported the work of consolidation.

Despite the church's loss of original purpose, its stark silhouette against the rural landscape of Glengarry County powerfully engages the minds of all who see it, evoking those early days in the history of the Church and preserving the memory of those intrepid settlers.

The Ruins was declared a National Historic Site in 1999.

Source: "History St. Raphael's Church"

Note about print quality: Mr. MacDonald created the paper masters for these books in the 1980s using a photocopier. When Global Genealogy acquired the rights and republished the works in 2010, they digitally cleaned the surviving masters to the best that they can be. The result is quite readable, though some photographs and photocopies of documents are not at the standard that we expect today. Also of note is that MacDonald made pencil correction on his masters from time to time.  Those are included as provided to us.

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