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  [[File:HackmanLinford.jpg|300px|thumb|right|''Ada &amp; Linford Hackman  
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[[File:HackmanLinford.jpg|300px|thumb|right|''Ada &amp; Linford Hackman '']]   
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Linford Hackman: minister of the [[West Zion Mennonite Church (Carstairs, Alberta, Canada)|West Zion Mennonite Church]] near Carstairs, northern missions worker, itinerant pastor and evangelist of the [[Northwest Mennonite Conference|Alberta-Saskatchewan Mennonite Conference]], was born on 2 December 1906 in Souderton, Pennsylvania, and died at Edmonton, Alberta, on 11 April 1983. He married Ada Clemens (6 January 1908- ) on 15 June 1925. They were the parents of four sons and two daughters.
  
'']]    Linford Hackman: minister of the [[West Zion Mennonite Church (Carstairs, Alberta, Canada)|West Zion Mennonite Church]] near Carstairs, northern missions worker, itinerant pastor and evangelist of the [[Northwest Mennonite Conference|Alberta-Saskatchewan Mennonite Conference]], was born on 2 December 1906 in Souderton, Pennsylvania, and died at Edmonton, Alberta, on 11 April 1983. He married Ada Clemens (6 January 1908- ) on 15 June 1925. They were the parents of four sons and two daughters.
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[[File:1516bHackmanLinford1946-47.jpg|300px|thumb|right|''Linford Hackman and his airplane, 1904.
 
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</br>Scan courtesy [http://www.mennoniteusa.org/executive-board/archives/ Mennonite Church USA Archives-Goshen] Photograph Collection binders. Photo #1516'']]     
[[File:1516bHackmanLinford1946-47.jpg|300px|thumb|right|''Linford Hackman and his  
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At the age of seventeen Linford Hackman contracted scarlet fever and, fearing for his life, accepted Jesus as his Lord and Savior. He was then baptized in bed at his home. He recovered from his illness after two surgeries performed on the kitchen table of the family home.
 
 
airplane, 1904. Scan courtesy  
 
 
 
[http://www.mcusa-archives.org/ Mennonite Church USA &lt;br/&gt; Archives-Goshen] Mennonite Church USA
 
 
 
Archives-Goshen Photograph  
 
 
 
Collection binders. Photo #1516  
 
 
 
'']]    At the age of seventeen Linford Hackman contracted scarlet fever and, fearing for his life, accepted Jesus as his Lord and Savior. He was then baptized in bed at his home. He recovered from his illness after two surgeries performed on the kitchen table of the family home.
 
  
 
As a boy Linford read numerous magazines and books about northern adventures and came to regard the North as a great mission field. Together with a friend, Llewellyn Groff, he began to teach Sunday School classes, distribute tracts and erect road-side gospel signs in his home community. After both men were married they decided on a honeymoon trip to the Peace River country of northern [[Alberta (Canada)|Alberta]] in 1929, contacting Mennonite congregations along the way. That trip marked the beginning of a life-long enthusiasm for northern missions. But in the next fifteen years Linford and Ada Hackman did mission work in northern Ontario and northern [[Minnesota (USA)|Minnesota]] where Hackman learned to fly and eventually acquired a small aircraft.
 
As a boy Linford read numerous magazines and books about northern adventures and came to regard the North as a great mission field. Together with a friend, Llewellyn Groff, he began to teach Sunday School classes, distribute tracts and erect road-side gospel signs in his home community. After both men were married they decided on a honeymoon trip to the Peace River country of northern [[Alberta (Canada)|Alberta]] in 1929, contacting Mennonite congregations along the way. That trip marked the beginning of a life-long enthusiasm for northern missions. But in the next fifteen years Linford and Ada Hackman did mission work in northern Ontario and northern [[Minnesota (USA)|Minnesota]] where Hackman learned to fly and eventually acquired a small aircraft.
  
 
Hackman was ordained to the ministry in 1944 while working in northern Minnesota, but returned to Alberta in 1945 to look for prospective localities for mission work. The following year he and three members of the Mission Board of Alberta-Saskatchewan Mennonite Conference traveled more extensively in the north and subsequently established a number of northern mission stations. Hackman made the West Zion Mennonite Church near Carstairs his home base, but retained great enthusiasm for northern mission work. He made numerous trips north, serving as pastor of the small [[Edson Mennonite Church (Edson, Alberta, Canada)|Edson]] congregation in the late 1950s and as itinerant pastor charged with responsibility to visit as many of the scattered northern congregations, mission stations and voluntary service projects as possible each year. The Hackmans retired to live in Edmonton where they became members of the [[Holyrood Mennonite Church (Edmonton, Alberta, Canada)|Holyrood Mennonite Church]].
 
Hackman was ordained to the ministry in 1944 while working in northern Minnesota, but returned to Alberta in 1945 to look for prospective localities for mission work. The following year he and three members of the Mission Board of Alberta-Saskatchewan Mennonite Conference traveled more extensively in the north and subsequently established a number of northern mission stations. Hackman made the West Zion Mennonite Church near Carstairs his home base, but retained great enthusiasm for northern mission work. He made numerous trips north, serving as pastor of the small [[Edson Mennonite Church (Edson, Alberta, Canada)|Edson]] congregation in the late 1950s and as itinerant pastor charged with responsibility to visit as many of the scattered northern congregations, mission stations and voluntary service projects as possible each year. The Hackmans retired to live in Edmonton where they became members of the [[Holyrood Mennonite Church (Edmonton, Alberta, Canada)|Holyrood Mennonite Church]].
 
 
 
= Bibliography =
 
= Bibliography =
<em class="gameo_bibliography"> </em>Regehr, T. D. Regehr <em class="gameo_bibliography">, Faith, Life and Witness in the Northwest, 1903-2003: Centennial History of the Northwest Mennonite Conference. </em> Kitchener, ON : Pandora Press, 2003.
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Regehr, T. D. Regehr <em class="gameo_bibliography">, Faith, Life and Witness in the Northwest, 1903-2003: Centennial History of the Northwest Mennonite Conference. </em> Kitchener, ON : Pandora Press, 2003.
  
Stauffer, Ezra. <em class="gameo_bibliography">H</em><em class="gameo_bibliography">istory of the Alberta-Saskatchewan Mennonite Conference. </em> Ryley, Alberta: Alberta-Saskatchewan Mennonite Conference, 1960: 63-66.
+
Stauffer, Ezra. <em class="gameo_bibliography">History of the Alberta-Saskatchewan Mennonite Conference. </em> Ryley, Alberta: Alberta-Saskatchewan Mennonite Conference, 1960: 63-66.
  
 
Martin, Paul H. <em class="gameo_bibliography">As the North Called to Linford Hackman. </em> Des Moines, Iowa : Paul H. Martin, 1995.
 
Martin, Paul H. <em class="gameo_bibliography">As the North Called to Linford Hackman. </em> Des Moines, Iowa : Paul H. Martin, 1995.
 
 
 
{{GAMEO_footer|hp=|date=December 2003|a1_last=Regehr|a1_first=Ted D|a2_last= |a2_first= }}
 
{{GAMEO_footer|hp=|date=December 2003|a1_last=Regehr|a1_first=Ted D|a2_last= |a2_first= }}

Latest revision as of 18:51, 23 May 2014

Ada & Linford Hackman

Linford Hackman: minister of the West Zion Mennonite Church near Carstairs, northern missions worker, itinerant pastor and evangelist of the Alberta-Saskatchewan Mennonite Conference, was born on 2 December 1906 in Souderton, Pennsylvania, and died at Edmonton, Alberta, on 11 April 1983. He married Ada Clemens (6 January 1908- ) on 15 June 1925. They were the parents of four sons and two daughters.

Linford Hackman and his airplane, 1904.
Scan courtesy Mennonite Church USA Archives-Goshen Photograph Collection binders. Photo #1516

At the age of seventeen Linford Hackman contracted scarlet fever and, fearing for his life, accepted Jesus as his Lord and Savior. He was then baptized in bed at his home. He recovered from his illness after two surgeries performed on the kitchen table of the family home.

As a boy Linford read numerous magazines and books about northern adventures and came to regard the North as a great mission field. Together with a friend, Llewellyn Groff, he began to teach Sunday School classes, distribute tracts and erect road-side gospel signs in his home community. After both men were married they decided on a honeymoon trip to the Peace River country of northern Alberta in 1929, contacting Mennonite congregations along the way. That trip marked the beginning of a life-long enthusiasm for northern missions. But in the next fifteen years Linford and Ada Hackman did mission work in northern Ontario and northern Minnesota where Hackman learned to fly and eventually acquired a small aircraft.

Hackman was ordained to the ministry in 1944 while working in northern Minnesota, but returned to Alberta in 1945 to look for prospective localities for mission work. The following year he and three members of the Mission Board of Alberta-Saskatchewan Mennonite Conference traveled more extensively in the north and subsequently established a number of northern mission stations. Hackman made the West Zion Mennonite Church near Carstairs his home base, but retained great enthusiasm for northern mission work. He made numerous trips north, serving as pastor of the small Edson congregation in the late 1950s and as itinerant pastor charged with responsibility to visit as many of the scattered northern congregations, mission stations and voluntary service projects as possible each year. The Hackmans retired to live in Edmonton where they became members of the Holyrood Mennonite Church.

Bibliography

Regehr, T. D. Regehr , Faith, Life and Witness in the Northwest, 1903-2003: Centennial History of the Northwest Mennonite Conference. Kitchener, ON : Pandora Press, 2003.

Stauffer, Ezra. History of the Alberta-Saskatchewan Mennonite Conference. Ryley, Alberta: Alberta-Saskatchewan Mennonite Conference, 1960: 63-66.

Martin, Paul H. As the North Called to Linford Hackman. Des Moines, Iowa : Paul H. Martin, 1995.


Author(s) Ted D Regehr
Date Published December 2003

Cite This Article

MLA style

Regehr, Ted D. "Hackman, Linford (1906-1983)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. December 2003. Web. 16 Apr 2024. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Hackman,_Linford_(1906-1983)&oldid=122510.

APA style

Regehr, Ted D. (December 2003). Hackman, Linford (1906-1983). Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 16 April 2024, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Hackman,_Linford_(1906-1983)&oldid=122510.




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