Difference between revisions of "Mennonite Historical Society of Ontario"

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<em>The Amish and Their Neighbours : the German Block, Wilmot Township 1822-1860</em> by Lorraine Roth (1998, reprints in 1999 and 2010)
 
<em>The Amish and Their Neighbours : the German Block, Wilmot Township 1822-1860</em> by Lorraine Roth (1998, reprints in 1999 and 2010)
 
= Additional Information =
 
= Additional Information =
<strong>Address</strong>: Conrad Grebel University College, 140 Westmount Road North, Waterloo, Ontario N2L 3G6
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'''Address''': Conrad Grebel University College, 140 Westmount Road North, Waterloo, Ontario N2L 3G6
  
 
'''Website''': [http://www.mhso.org/ Mennonite Historical Society of Ontario]
 
'''Website''': [http://www.mhso.org/ Mennonite Historical Society of Ontario]

Revision as of 22:45, 8 November 2016

The Mennonite Historical Society of Ontario (MHSO) held its first meeting on 8 May 1965 with 35 persons in attendance. Orland Gingerich gave a presentation on the reasons to form an historical society, and Conrad Grebel College President, J. Winfield Fretz, led a discussion on possible organizational approaches. The option of a society closely related to the College received the most favor. 

Mennonite Historical Society of Ontario Board of Directors, 1966. L-R: Dorothy Swartzentruber, secretary; Barbara Coffman; Herbert Enns, treasurer; Elven Shantz; J. Winfield Fretz, president; Wilson Hunsberger; Lorna Bergey; Harold Nigh; Orland Gingerich, vice-president. Missing: Henry Dueck, Earle Snyder

The founding purposes approved at the 5 June 1965 organizational meeting included promotion of interest in and the dissemination of information concerning Anabaptist-Mennonite history generally; support of research in Ontario Mennonite history; encouragement of publications in the field of Ontario Mennonite history; support of the Mennonite Historical Library and Archives at Conrad Grebel College through encouragement of donations of books and documents relevant to Ontario Mennonite history. J. Winfield Fretz, became the Society's founding president; the founding board of directors included Lorna Bergey, Barbara Coffman, Henry Dueck, J. Winfield Fretz, Orland Gingerich, Wilson Hunsberger, Elven Shantz, Earle Snyder and Dorothy Swartzentruber. The initial membership was about 40.

The Society has generally held two public meetings per year, sometimes in combination with bus trips to historical sites in Southern Ontario. The initial bus trip was to Vineland, Ontario. A longer bus trip to Pennsylvania was sponsored in 1983. The Society has also helped to sponsor a variety of dramatic presentations. A centennial pageant, "The New Commandment" by Barbara Coffman was performed in 1967. A stage play, adapted by Norma Rudy from Mabel Dunham's Trail of the Conestoga, was mounted three times (1969, 1970, 1973) and a film of the play was released in 1977. Two shorter film productions were "And When Their Time had Come" (a 45 minute  dramatic documentary filmed in 1971 about the Mennonite experience in Russia and subsequent emigration to Canada in the 1920s) and "Beyond This Land" (a 42 minute Amish Sesquicentennial historical pageant produced by the Mennonite Historical Society of Ontario presented in the Stratford Festival Theatre in 1972-1973, based on a script by Urie Bender).

The MHSO also played a key role in the preservation of two historical buildings:

  1. John E. Brubacher House, 2003.
    Brubacher House Museum -- located on the North Campus of the University of Waterloo, this 1850 stone farmhouse was built by John E. and Magdalena Brubacher. Already in the 1960s plans were underway to restore the house as a museum. A fire in 1968 gutted the house, so the subsequent recreation of the interior took several years. The Society was asked to furnish the main floor of the Brubacher house and to develop the programming for the museum. Lorna Bergey, long-term secretary of the Society coordinated the gathering of furnishings for Brubacher House. The furnishings reflect the style of a 19th century Ontario Mennonite farm house. Most of the furniture was donated by Mennonite families in the Waterloo region. The upstairs became a furnished apartment for museum hosts, often either a young married couple or a retired couple. For many years a slide presentation prepared by Paul and Edna Hunsberger, then a host couple, introduced visitors to Pennsylvania German life and culture. In 2005 the Society prepared a 15 minute video introduction to the Brubacher family and Brubacher House Museum.
  2. Detweiler Meetinghouse, Inc. -- located just west of the village of Roseville, this 1855 stone meetinghouse had been part of the Mennonite Conference of Ontario until services ended in 1966. It was rented for a time to other groups and remained empty for a time. The conference responded to appeals from local groups, including the Historical Society, and transferred ownership of the meetinghouse and the adjoining cemetery to a local board. Three members of the board are appointed by the Society. The restoration to a 19th century meetinghouse interior was completed in 1999. The facility has been used for weddings, musical events and other rental groups.

The Society has published a semi-annual periodical since 1983 under two titles: (Mennogespräch (1983-1992) and Ontario Mennonite History (1992- ). Editors have included Sam Steiner (March 1983-March 1991); E. Reginald Good (September 1991-September 1996); Lorna Bergey (April 1997); Brent Bauman (October 1997-June 2005); and Barb Draper (November 2005- ).

The Society was the formal sponsor of the Mennonite Bicentennial Commission which celebrated the 200th anniversary of Mennonites in Canada in 1986. The Society is also a member of the Mennonite Historical Society of Canada, which it helped to form jointly with the Manitoba Mennonite Historical Society, as a means to sponsor the Mennonites in Canada history book series by Frank H. Epp.

Lorna Bergey served as secretary of MHSO from 1968-2000, and was a board member for 37 years. She was the "engine" that provided organizational energy during her years of service.

Bibliography

"History." Detweiler Meetinghouse, Inc. Web. 6 November 2010. http://www.detweilermeetinghouse.ca/.

Ontario Mennonite History 18 (November 2000). (This issue contained a number of articles related to the 35th anniversary of the Society.)

Publications by Mennonite Historical Society of Ontario

The Mennonites in Ontario by J. Winfield Fretz (1967)

The Mennonites in Ontario by J. Winfield Fretz (1974)

The Mennonites in Ontario by J. Winfield Fretz (1982)

Mennonites in Ontario by Marlene Epp (1994)

Mennonites in Ontario by Marlene Epp (2002)

Mennonites in Ontario by Marlene Epp (

A Brief History of Mennonites in Ontario by L. J. Burkholder (1986 reprint of 1935 original)

Willing Service : Stories of Ontario Mennonite Women by Lorraine Roth (1992)

The Amish and Their Neighbours : the German Block, Wilmot Township 1822-1860 by Lorraine Roth (1998, reprints in 1999 and 2010)

Additional Information

Address: Conrad Grebel University College, 140 Westmount Road North, Waterloo, Ontario N2L 3G6

Website: Mennonite Historical Society of Ontario

Mennonite Historical Societyof Ontario Presidents

Name Years of

Service

J. Winfield Fretz 1965-1977
Orland Gingerich 1977-1980
Sam Steiner 1980-1981

1998-2000

2002-2006

Alice Koch 1981-1992
E. Reginald Good 1992-1998
Marlene Epp 2000-2002
Maurice Martin 2006-


Author(s) Sam Steiner
Date Published November 2010

Cite This Article

MLA style

Steiner, Sam. "Mennonite Historical Society of Ontario." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. November 2010. Web. 16 Apr 2024. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Mennonite_Historical_Society_of_Ontario&oldid=140242.

APA style

Steiner, Sam. (November 2010). Mennonite Historical Society of Ontario. Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 16 April 2024, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Mennonite_Historical_Society_of_Ontario&oldid=140242.




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