Frances Mary Sim, a church worker in Bledlow and Windsor, England, was the sister of the Yukon missionary, Rev. Vincent C. Sim.
Scope and Content
Fonds consists of a letter from Bishop Bompas (1885), two from Bishop Stringer (1908, 1912) together with a copy of the book "An Apostle of the North: Memoirs of the Right Reverend William Carpenter Bompas, D.D.", by H.A. Cody. Includes original photographs and a newspaper clipping.
Hiram Alfred Cody (1872-1948), a graduate of King's University, Windsor, Nova Scotia, was ordained deacon in 1896 and priest in 1898. Served in churches at Doaktown and Ludlow, New Brunswick before becoming Archdeacon of Christ Church Cathedral, Fredericton. Wrote numerous novels while serving as a travelling missionary in the Yukon, mainly pertaining to life in the Northland. He was rector of St. James Church, Saint John for 32 years.
Scope and Content
Fonds consists of correspondence with Bishop Isaac O. Stringer, Bishop William Carpenter Bompas, Bessie Parmalee, the Rev. A.E. O'Meara, the Rev. John Hawksley and other missionaries; addresses and sermons by Cody; and photographs.
Henry Alford Naylor (1873-1956) graduated from McGill University and took his theological training at the Montreal Diocesan Theological College. He was ordained deacon in 1896 and priest in 1897. He became the first missionary at Forty Mile, Yukon Territory where he worked among the miners for three years. In 1899, he became rector of St. Paul's, Dawson City. In 1901, Naylor returned to the Montreal diocese and became incumbent of Chelsea until 1905; Incumbent of Arundel, 1905-1910; Rector of Frehlighsburg, 1910-1915; Rector of St.Lambert, 1915-1926. Rural Dean, 1915-1927; Curate of St.Cyprus, Montreal, 1927-1933; Incumbent of Valleyfield, 1933-1945 (retired). H.A. Naylor was the son of Archdeacon W.H. Naylor of Clarendon, Quebec, and brother to Archdeacon R. Kenneth Naylor.
Scope and Content
Fonds consists of typescript copies of personal and professional correspondence and photographs regarding people and places in the Diocese of Yukon. Includes correspondence with members of the Naylor family; Bp. and Mrs. W.C. Bompas; Roland Palmer of the S.S.J.E. and other people working in the in the Yukon such as Benjamin Totty, John Hawksley, Isaac Stringer, H.A. Cody, R.J. Bowen.
Isaac O. Stringer (1866-1934) received a B.A., 1891 from University College, Toronto, and B.D. from Wycliffe College in 1892. He was ordained deacon in 1892, priest in 1893 and then stationed at Fort McPherson in Peel River from 1892-1897 as a Church Missionary Society (C.M.S.) missionary. In the summer of 1895, Stringer took a leave of absence for a year, returning to Ontario for deputation work and to marry Sarah Ann Alexander (Sadie), March 10, 1896.
After graduation from high school, Sadie studied shorthand and later worked as a secretary in New York City. She received a diploma in nursing from Grace Hospital in Toronto and studied at the Toronto Anglican Women's Training School.
After spending a year together at Fort McPherson, the Stringers moved to Herschel Island in the Arctic Ocean and lived there among the Inuit from 1897-1901. Suffering acutely from eyestrain, Stringer took his family back to Ontario in the fall of 1901. In 1903, Bishop Bompas of the Diocese of Selkirk called him to serve as a C.C.C.S. (Colonial and Continental Church Society) missionary at Whitehorse, Yukon. Eventually, Stringer became Bompas' successor in the Diocese which changed its name to Yukon, Dec. 17, 1907, serving until 1931 when he became Archbishop of Rupert's Land. He died suddenly on Oct. 30, 1934 at Winnipeg.
Scope and Content
Fonds consists of correspondence, manuscript books, sermons, photographs, scrapbooks and miscellaneous manuscript and printed items accumulated by the Stringers during the latter part of the nineteenth century into the mid-fifties.
The fonds is arranged in the following series:
Series I. Isaac O. Stringer, 1884-1961
Series II. Sarah Ann Stringer, 1896-1954
Series III. Collected materials, 1872-1967
Series IV. Photographs, 1872-1934
Series V. Scrapbooks
Series VI. Printed Items, 1901-1962
Joe Hodgson worked as a company clerk in the Hudson's Bay Company at Fort McPherson from 1873 to 1907.
Scope and Content
Fonds consists of a memoranda of his experiences up north particular to his dealings with the natives, a letter to Archbishop Stringer and additional notes on Bishop Bompas.
Associated Material
Hudsons' Bay Company Archives at the Provincial Archives of Manitoba (https://www.gov.mb.ca/chc/archives/_docs/hbca/biographical/h/hodgson_joseph.pdf)
That the National Executive Council requests the Primate to convey to the Prime Minister, the Premiers of the Provinces and the Territorial Government Leaders our opposition to the process being followed by the Governments of Canada and the Provinces as embodied in the Meech Lake Accord, and express to them our grave concern about:
a) the negation of the rights of Native people, including the right to be consulted;
b) the diminution of the rights of women and the recognition of men and women as equal persons;
c) the denial of the rights of the Northwest Territories and Yukon to participate fully in Canadian political and public life.
Moved by Ven. A.R. Reed
Seconded by: Dr. L.L. Whytehead
That the words "the negation of", "the diminution of", and "the denial of" be deleted. DEFEATED
That the National Executive Council ask the Primate to encourage all Anglicans whenever praying for provinces or provincial governments, to include territories or territorial governments. CARRIED #45-10-87
Thomas Henry Canham (1852-1947) studied at the Church Missionary Society College at Islington, England and was ordained priest in 1880. He served at Portage La Prairie, Manitoba (1881-1882), St. Matthews Mission, Peel River, McKenzie River, N.W.T. (1882-1887), St. James Mission, Lower Yukon River (1888-1892), Tukudh Mission (1888-1891), St. Andrew, Selkirk, Yukon (1892-1910), St. Saviour, Carcross, Yukon (1910-1922), and Archdeacon of the Yukon (1892-1924). His English-Wood Indian vocabulary was published by the Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge (S.P.C.K) in 1898. His work in the north was shared by his wife, Charlotte Sarah French Canham (m. 1886).
Scope and Content
Fonds consists of official documents, correspondence, various addresses and clippings, catalogues of books at the Church Missionary Society at Carcross and St. Andrew's Mission, notebooks and diaries, sermons and sermon material, glossaries and hymns in Selkirk Indian, translations of sections of the Prayer Book and Bible, photographs and glass plate negatives of people and places in Canham's missions.
Series on Charlotte Sarah French Canham, T.H. Canham's wife, consists of a biographical profile and articles on Charlotte by her distant relative Marilyn Lappi.