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John Bethune (minister)
Founded first Presbyterian Church in Montreal; Scottish-Canadian minister

John Bethune (minister)

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Founded first Presbyterian Church in Montreal; Scottish-Canadian minister
Places
Work field
Gender
Male
Religion(s):
Place of birth
Skye
Place of death
South Glengarry
Family
Children:
Angus Bethune John Bethune James Gray Bethune Alexander Bethune Donald Bethune
John Bethune (minister)
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

John Bethune (1751 – September 23, 1815) founded the first Presbyterian Church in Montreal and was the patriarch of a notable Canadian family prominently connected with the fur trade, politics, medicine, law and the church. He was the great-great-grandfather of Norman Bethune, the Canadian physician and medical innovator, and the great-great-great-grandfather of Canadian actor Christopher Plummer.

Scotland

Born into a well-respected family on the Isle of Skye, he was a son of Angus Bethune and Christian, daughter of Donald Campbell (1696-1784) of Scalpay. His maternal grandfather was best remembered for his involvement in the escape of Bonnie Prince Charlie in 1746, following the Battle of Culloden. The Prince was taken to Scalpay, to the home of Donald and Catherine (MacDonald) Campbell, which was a great risk as Donald Campbell was known to have supported the cause of the House of Hanover. Nevertheless, Bethune's grandfather's innate sense of hospitality to strangers and loyalty to his wife's Jacobite family meant that he welcomed and protected the Prince, despite their religious and political differences.

American Revolution

Bethune needed scholarships to keep him at King's College, Aberdeen. In 1773, he was ordained and under the influence of his relation, Allan MacDonald, Laird of Kingsburgh, Skye, (the husband of the Jacobite heroine Flora MacDonald), he and his mother emigrated to North Carolina, where they lived in the same place as the MacDonalds. As a Loyalist in MacDonald's Highland Regiment, Bethune fought at the Battle of Moore's Creek Bridge in February 1776, but was captured by the victorious rebels along with a great many of MacDonald's men. He was eventually released and made his way to Montreal, where he was appointed chaplain to the 1st battalion of the 84th Regiment of Foot (Royal Highland Emigrants).

Canada

Bethune-Thompson House, Williamstown

In 1784, upon the demobilization of his regiment, Bethune ministered to a small band of Presbyterian Scots and in 1786 established the first Presbyterian Church on St Gabriel's Street, Montreal, which became the mother church of Presbyterianism in Canada. One year later he came to Glengarry (spelled Glengary at the time) to be among the loyalist settlers of his regiment. Settling at his home (now a national historic site, later occupied by David Thompson) in Williamstown, here he devoted the remainder of his life to his ministry. The harmonious and amicable relations among the denominations is now legendary. The Roman Catholic Bishop at St Raphael's, Alexander Macdonell, prided himself on his knowledge of Protestant prayers by which he could fill in for Bethune when needed.

Family

In 1782, before the close of the war, Bethune married Veronique Wadin (d.1846), daughter of Jean-Étienne Wadin (1738–1782), a founding partner of the North West Company. Veronique's mother was Marie-Josephe De Guire, and the sister of Marguerite, wife of Dr. John McLaughlin, Father of Oregon. After Bethune's death, Veronique Bethune resided happily with her daughter Christine and son-in-law Robert Henry at Cobourg for 31 years and was regarded by distinguished travellers of the period as a lady of great wit and charm. The Bethunes were the parents of ten children (all the sons were educated by John Strachan) and one adopted daughter, Ann McLeod:

  • Angus Bethune (1783–1858), of Toronto. Wintering partner in the North West Company and after 1821, chief factor in the Hudson's Bay Company. He traveled with the explorer David Thompson over the Rocky Mountains and voyaged to Canton Province, China in the service of the HBC. In 1818, he was one of the last five men to be inducted into the Beaver Club. He married Louisa (Green Blanket) Mackenzie, daughter of Roderick Mackenzie of Terrebonne by his country wife. They were great-grandparents of Norman Bethune a doctor and philanthropist, still revered by the 1.4 billion Chinese.
  • Cecilia Bethune (1785–1842), of Kingston. Her first husband was Walter Butler Wilkinson of Cornwall, Ontario, a promising young lawyer who died at the age of 26 years. After his death she married John Kirby of Kingston.
  • Christine Bethune (1787–1865), of Cobourg. Her first husband was John Low Farrand of Cornwall, Ontario. Secondly, she married Robert Henry, son of explorer Alexander Henry. He was wintering partner of the North West Company and director of the Commercial Bank of the Midland District at Cobourg.
  • Norman Bethune (1789–1848), of Montreal. King's Auctioneer at Montreal with his kinsman Alexander Henry. He also owned a commercial forwarding agency at Lachine for bateaux and Durham boats of the St Lawrence route to the Great Lakes. He married Margaret Kittson, whose father was the stepson of Alexander Henry.
  • John Bethune (1791–1872), of Montreal. First native-born Canadian ordained in the Church of England. He was principal of McGill University and Dean of Montreal. He married Elizabeth Hallowell of Montreal, daughter of William Hallowell from Bedford, England, a signing partner of the North West Company. They were the parents of Lady Abbott, Strachan Bethune, 1st Anglican Chancellor of Montreal and great-great grandparents of the actor Christopher Plummer.
  • James Gray Bethune (1793–1841), of Rochester New York. Banker and merchant at Cobourg. Following a disgrace in his business he abandoned Canada. He married Martha Covert of Cobourg.
  • Anne Bethune (1798–1835), of Montreal & Cobourg. She married Henry Mackenzie, wintering partner of the North West Company, clerk of session of the St Gabriel's Street Presbyterian Church in Montreal, and owner of the firm MacKenzie and Olgilvie, which managed an industrial complex (now a museum) in Terrebonne, a seigneurie on the outskirts of Montreal, which he shared with his brother Roderick Mackenzie, also a partner in the North West Company and founder of the first European settlement in Alberta, and cousin of Alexander Mackenzie the explorer, who reached the west coast of North America twelve years before Lewis and Clark.
  • Alexander Bethune (1800–1879), second Bishop of Toronto, he succeeding his teacher and mentor John Strachan. He married Jane Eliza Crooks, daughter of James Crooks and niece of Ramsay Crooks, associate of John Jacob Astor in the American Fur Company. Father of Charles Bethune, 2nd Headmaster of Trinity College School
  • Donald Bethune (1802–1869), founded a shipping firm in Upper Canada, which ultimately failed, he was also a politician. He married Jennet Smith, daughter of Peter Smith of Kingston, Ontario.
  • Ann McLeod, the tenth member of the Bethune's Williamstown household, was the orphaned Métis daughter of Nor'Wester Alexander McLeod of Deurinish (near Skye), a relation of Archibald Norman McLeod, who died in 1809 at Montreal. She married Alexander Mackenzie of Williamstown, but died in child birth at the age of 24. Her son, Alexander McLeod Mackenzie, longtime County Registrar at Alexandria is buried beside his parents at St Andrews Church Cemetery in Williamstown next to Mr Bethune's monument.

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