Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout2096Altona Mennonite Meetinghouse Commentary by Marion MacRae and Anthony Adamson in Hallowed Walls: Church Architecture of Upper Canada. (Toronto: Clarke, Irwin, 1976, p. 194.) In 1807 the first Mennonite settlers had made their way into Markham Township, taking up land near the Quaker settlement, and had begun, almost imperceptibly, to modify their attitude toward the customs and amenities enjoyed by their neighbours. Mennonite meetinghouses in the counties of York and Ontario tended to be in brick—a sensible selection on clay lands—and these plain people began gradually to adopt the use of oil lamps, window shades, and carriage sheds, in the manner of the Society of Friends living near them. In time the carriage sheds disappeared from the meetinghouse yard at Altona in Pickering Township, as the Mennonite brethren slowly accepted the mobility of the automobile.