1

Assiniboia Dominion Road Baptist
24 October 2005
Assiniboia,Saskatchewan
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2

Baptist Churches of South Central Saskatchewan

Between 1907 and 1910 many families moved to the Dewdrop Postal District from Eastern Canada and the United States.

3

Mr Gustaf Molberg
1914

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One of them was a lay minister and his wife - Mr. & Mrs. Gustaf P. Molberg.

The first services were held in homes.

Mr. Molberg was ordained to be a minister in the Baptist Convention of Saskatchewan on January 14th, 1914. This same year it was decided to have a mission in Assiniboia.

Rev. Molberg served from 1912 to 1920 in this area assisted by O.M. Morse and C.W. Clark.

Throughout the years ministers were shared with several points in Assiniboia, Shaunavon, Viceroy, Cardross and Ormiston.

5

Assiniboia Dominion Road Baptist
1985
Assiniboia,Saskatchewan
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6

Assiniboia Dominion Road Baptist Church

The population base of the community of Congress and surrounding area had undergone a significant shift. The social base had changed and shifted to Assiniboia.

The transition year was 1985, a sod turning ceremony in Assiniboia was held on August 9th 1985. The last official worship was held in the Congress Baptist Church August 25th 1985. Decommissioning service was held December 4th, with the first service in the newly constructed Dominion Road Baptist Church held December 22nd 1985.

From the closing at Congress until the first service in Assiniboia, worship was held in the Assiniboia Elementary School.

The 90th Anniversary was celebrated in 2002.

7

Cardross Baptist Church
1959
Cardross, Saskatchewan
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8

Cardross Baptist Church

At the end of May 1917 the requested student minister arrived. Services were held in several schools and above the Barclay Store. At times the summer services were held in a hall and in homes during the winter.

In 1959 a school house was purchased and moved to Cardross. Services were held each Sunday and an annual Vacation Bible School as well.

Later, due to some families moving away, the remaining traveled to a very active Ormiston Baptist Church.

9

Congress Baptist Church
1919
Congress, Saskatchewan
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10

Congress Baptist Church

Christian services were held in the home of Rev. G.P. Molberg, near Dewdrop post office, from spring of 1910 until fall of 1911 when Progress Hill School was built.

Services continued in the school until the church was built in the fall of 1919 in the Hamlet of Congress at a cost of $5,000.00.

The pastor was shared with Shaunavon on alternate Sundays. In 1955 the pastor was shared with Viceroy and Cardross. In 1967 a new parsonage was built in the Town of Assiniboia, a sign of future things to come.

The last official Sunday worship was held August 25, 1985. A decommissioning service was held December 4th, 1985. The congregation attended the first service in Assiniboia at the Dominion Road Baptist Church, December 22nd, 1985

The building was sold and used as a community hall.

11

Galilee Baptist Church
1930
Galilee, Saskatchewan
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12

Galilee Baptist Church

Pastor Hughes, pioneer and homesteader near the shore of Galilee Lake, named by him, traveled by horse or walked to visit each homestead shack within 32km (20 miles) of his home. Later services were held in Sugar Loaf School until 1930.

The Lutheran Church service and the Canadian Sunday School Mission were held in the school during the 1930s. From 1915, for the next 25 years a nondenominational Sunday Service and Bible Study were held in the school and moved to homes in winter.

It was closed due to dwindling population. The congregation still attends services in Spring Valley.

13

Ormiston Baptist
1959
Ormiston, Saskatchewan
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14

Ormiston Baptist

In 1957 Rev. Weibe from Congress Baptist Church started conducting Baptist Church service in Ormiston whenever possible. In 1958, the Baptist congregation was formed. The first services at this point were conducted by Rev. Roger Barnard from Missouri.

With no church building, services were held in the Ormiston Community Hall.

In 1959, the Baptist congregation purchased the Lutheran Church in Assiniboia, (which had its origins at Archive, Sask.) and had it moved across the hills to the present Hamlet of Ormiston. Ormiston absorbed the congregations of Galilee and Cardross and remains a very active congregation.