Welsford-Parker Monument
Triumphal arch · Halifax
Church building
St. Matthew's United Church is a United Church of Canada church in downtown Halifax, Nova Scotia. The church was founded at the same time as the original colony in 1749 as a home for the various groups of dissenting Protestants who were from New England and who did not follow the Church of England. It originally met Sunday afternoons in St. Paul's Church, the Church of England building completed in 1750. The church got its own home in 1754 when a church was constructed at Hollis and Prince streets. This building was destroyed by fire in 1857, and a new church was built at the current location at 1479 Barrington Street, land parcelled off of the Black-Binney House estate by Bishop Hibbert Binney. The church used the Old Burying Ground (Halifax, Nova Scotia).
The church was originally an amalgam of various dissenting Protestant groups with it mostly being a mix of Scottish Presbyterians and Puritan Congregationalists from the American colonies. Over the course of the 19th century the number of Presbyterians gradually increased and they came to dominate the church. In 1787, an agreement was made to adhere closer to Church of Scotland polity. They formally joined the Church of Scotland...
- Rev Aaron Cleveland (1751–1753) (died in the home of his friend Benjamin Franklin )
- Rev Andrew Brown Old College, the University of Edinburgh (1787–1795)
- Rev Archibald Gray (1795–1826); buried in the Old Burying Ground (Halifax, Nova Scotia)
- Rev. John Scott (minister) (1826–1883)
Rev Andrew Brown Old College, the University of Edinburgh (1787–1795)
Rev Archibald Gray (1795–1826); buried in the Old Burying Ground (Halifax, Nova Scotia)
Current Minister of Word, Sacrament, and Pastoral Care: The Rev. Elizabeth (Betsy) Hogan, 2010-