University of California Berkeley 



Vol. XII. AUGUST, 1880. No 


. 2. 


CONTENTS. 

t- P 

THE REV. WILLIAM BRIGGS John Carroll D.D .. 


AGE 
97 


-INDIAN MISSIONS ON THE NORTH PACIFIC COAST (Illustrated) , 


100 


THE DEAD .. .... 


113 


JAPAN Rev. George Cochran (Illustrated) II .... 


115 


CANADIAN METHODISM; ITS EPOCHS AND CHARACTERISTICS Rev. Dr. Ryerson 
THE FLOWERS . . 


126 
140 


A CANADIAN IN EUROPE W. H. Withrow,M.A 


141 


NATHANIEL PIDGEON His DIARY A Story of Early Methodism 


161 


BONDAGE 


159 


GREAT REFORMERS: Ulrich Zwinele (Illustrated) W. H. Withrow, M.A 


160 


Now AND AFTERWARD 


169 


BARBARA HECK ; A Story of the Founding of Upper Canada, by the author of 
" The King's Messenger " 


170 


SAINT THERESA TO OUR LORD Maurice Egan 


178 


PERFECT LOVE A PRESENT BLESSING W. H. Evans 


179 


CURRENT TOPICS AND EVENTS 


182 


RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE Rev. E. Barrass M.A 


185 




189 


Mrsic, " The Return Home " 


192 






3T Magazines bound f^r 10 cents per vol. Cloth Covers, post free, 25 cents. 





round tf 
: in the I 
j Eev. J 
1 interes 
e word ; 
>n, Mr. 
re nee, h 
L he bees 
tev. Dr. 
the tim 
ire of y 
nee desi 



Iriggs, without cheekiness and " management " on his own 
should have procured him good appointments and positions, 
b to be wondered at. He has occupied such stations as 
am, P. Q. ; Adelaide Street, Toronto ; Hamilton, Montreal, 
3n, Belleville, where he was Chairman of the District ; and 
Metropolitan Church of this city, which was his last pas- 
charge. 

3 financial and clerical capabilities early preferred him to 
ositions of Financial Secretary of a District, Secretary of a 
srence, and, lastly, his elevation to his present responsible 
on of Steward of the western and principal section of our 
Room. Personally, we were opposed, at the time, to giving 
i unmistakably good preacher to an untried business posi- 
but the results of last year showed that it was no dangerous 
iment ; and the published returns of the one now closing, 
very marked degree show that he is unmistakably the 
it man in the right place." Such an audacious piece of 
mortem dissection and analysis as we have perpetrated will 
re the forbearance of a gentleman who has sought no no- 
:y ; but as " naught has been set down in malice," we hope 
tain his forgiveness. 



INDIAN MISSIONS ON THE NOETH PACIFIC COAST.* 

NEVER, we 
think, have 
the triumphs 
of mission 
work "been 
more marked 
and marvel- 
lous than in 
the case of 
the Indian 
missions on 
the North 
Pacific coast. 
Previous ar- 
ticles of this 
MAGAZINE, f 
from the ac- 
complished 
pen of Mr. 
J. E. McMil- 
lan, have 

given an account of the origin of that work, the main features 
of which we here briefly recapitulate : 

It was not till the year 1864 that the Canadian Methodist 
Church fairly entered upon the work of Indian evangelization 
in British Columbia. In that year the Eev. Thomas Crosby 
began his great life-work as a lay teacher at Nanaimo. With 
the facility begotten by enthusiasm, lie rapidly acquired the 
native dialect, and was soon able to preach to the Indians in 
their own tongue. Here and among the pagan tribes on the 
banks of the majestic Frazer, he proclaimed the emancipating 
message of the cross, and many converts to the Christian faith, 

* For much of the information on which this article is founded, we are in- 
debted to the admirable volume on Alaska and Missions on the North Pacific 
Coast, by Dr. Sheldon Jackson, published by Dodd, Mead & Co., to whose 
courtesy we are also indebted for the use of the cuts by which it is illustrated. 

t See numbers for April and May, 1878. 




TATOOED INDIAN WOMAN, NOKTH PACIFIC COAST. 



Indian Missions on the North Pacific Co ist . 101 

by their changed lives and holy conversation and happy deaths, 
attested the power of the message. 

In the neighbourhood of Victoria, Vancouver's Island, at this 
time, were a number of Indians, the demoralized parasites of the 




white man's civilization, who had acquired, by contact, the white 
man's vices rather than his virtues. Their degraded condition 
awoke the pity of the Methodist community of the place, and 
in 1869 it was resolved, at a meeting held in the house of Mr. 
William McKay, to organize a Sunday-school for the religious 
instruction of these moral waifs and estrays of mankind. It 



102 



Canadian Methodist Magazine. 



was with difficulty that their native apathy was overcome, and 
any degree of interest aroused. Their teachers were unable to 
speak the native language, or even the Chinook jargon, and the 
Indians had only a very imperfect acquaintance with English. 
Through this imperfect medium, however, a knowledge of the 
glorious gospel of Christ found its way, and soon Amos Sa-hat- 




son, and two others of the same tribe, were rejoicing in the great 
salvation. 

For two years the school was regularly held, although the 
attendance was never more than ten or twelve, and often only 
three or four. Now, however, a wonderful revival took place, 
whose far-reaching results only the great day shall declare. 
Upwards of forty natives were converted to God, among them 



Indian Missions on the North Pacific Coast. 103 

Elizabeth Deix, a hereditary Indian chieftess, of great energy ot 
character. In her new-born zeal she prayed earnestly for the 
conversion of her son Alfred, a pagan Indian living at Fort 
Simpson, five hundred miles north of Victoria, and within fifteen 
miles of the Alaska frontier. At this very time was it not in 
answer to that mother's earnest prayers ? her son and his wife 
arrived at Victoria, and were soon sharers of the like precious 
faith. 

Alfred and his wife Kate spoke English well, and after ten 
months left Victoria with a few Bibles and Wesleyan Catechisms, 
as the pioneer missionaries to their pagan tribes-men at Fort 
Simpson. " The former desperado," writes Mr. McMillan, " who 
a few months before was the terror of the whole surrounding 
country, had all at once become a meek and quiet citizen and 
zealous working Christian." With his wife he established a day- 
school, which soon had 200 pupils, and organized prayer and 
experience meetings and religious classes. Before a single white 
missionary visited the Fort, every family had renounced paganism, 
five hundred persons were attending these religious services, and 
several were hopefully converted to God. In answer to their 
earnest prayers for a missionary, the Eev. Mr. Crosby and his 
devoted wife were sent to take charge of this promising station. 
The Indians promptly contributed towards the erection of a 
church, several hundred dollars in money and money's worth, 
and soon they had a commodious and elegant church, forty by 
fifty feet, with a spire 110 feet high, capable of seating 800 
persons indeed the most commodious Methodist church in the 
province. During its erection a storm blew off the roof and 
threatened its destruction. The walls were firmly lashed with 
ropes, and the people repaired to the school-house. There the 
following scene, as described by Dr. Jackson, took place : "A 
chief arose and called out that it was not a time for long speeches, 
but for action. Instantly twenty or thirty men left the house ; 
others followed them, but soon they returned with rolls of 
blankets the currency of that region on their shoulders and 
laid them in front of the teacher's desk, as their offering to the 
Lord. Blankets, coats, shirts, shawls, guns, finger and ear-rings, 
bracelets, furs, and almost everything that could be turned into 
money, were laid upon the table, to the value of $400 a striking 
commentary on the constraining love of Christ in their hearts." 



104 Canadian Methodist Magazine. 

As at Fort Simpson, so also in the vast territory of Alaska, con- 
verted Indians were the pioneers of evangelical Protestant 
Christianity. The Eussians, indeed, had for many years priests 




HUNTING WALRUS. 



of the Greek Church in that country ; but on its cession to the 
United States they were withdrawn. The influx of American 
miners a reckless and wicked lot of men and the establish- 



Indian Missions on the North Pacific Coast. 105 

inent of a military post at Fort Wrangel, far from the restraints 
of civilization, had introduced all the vices of the white race, 
and greatly demoralized and degraded the Indian population. 
The place was almost wholly given up to drunkenness, gambling, 
and debauchery. In 1876 a number of Christian Indians from 
Fort Simpson arrived at Fort Wrangel under contract to cut 
wood for the American Government. Among them was an 
Indian named Clah, or Philip McKay, a man of superior intelli- 
gence and piety. These faithful Indians, amid the abounding 
wickedness on every side, resolved to make an effort for the con- 
version of their countrymen. They obtained the use of an old 
dance-house the scene of the foulest pagan orgies as a place 
of worship, and induced a few of the natives to attend. Though 
mocked and jeered and opposed by wicked white men, they per- 
severed till the place became too small for the crowds of 
those benighted pagans who thronged to the meetings, some 
forty of whom were converted to Christianity by this strange 
agency, among them the head chief of the place. For weeks 
and mouths, writes Mr. McMillan, the voice of praise and prayer 
was daily heard at Fort Wrangel, the services being conducted 
wholly by these Christian Indians. The commandant of the 
fort gave them his protection, and secured a room for their ser- 
vices. To put an end to the hideous Indian custom of dancing 
around a dead body and consuming it to ashes, the Christian 
Indians procured a plot of ground for a cemetery, and interred 
the dead with Christian rites. 

In the fall of the year Mr. Crosby visited the Fort and took 
steps to organize a church. Subscriptions in money and blankets 
were received in amounts varying from ten dollars to twenty- 
five cents, and many promised work. Mr. Crosby agreed to look 
after the mission thus providentially begun, till an American 
missionary could be appointed to its control. He directed 
Clah to remain and open a school. So anxious were the natives 
to learn, that the school was attended by sixty or seventy adults. 
Three times on Sunday Clah preached to audiences of from 200 
to 400 of his own people. The wicked whites and Indian sor- 
cerers opposed by ridicule and threats of violence these services ; 
but they grew in influence and power. Prayerless white men 
were reminded of their early religious training, and many of the 
Indians were converted from paganism, devil-dances, and witch- 



106 



Canadian Methodist Magazine. 



craft, to the service of God. An American soldier wrote 
to General Howard, of the U. S. army, urging the appointment 
of a missionary. The appeal was sent to the Presbyterian 
General Assembly, and Dr. Jackson was authorized by the Board 




of Missions to make a missionary tour to the Pacific coast. In 
Oregon he found an old missionary friend, Mrs. A. E. McFar- 
land, a lady born in Virginia, educated in Ohio, and the now 



Indian Missions on the Norih Pacific Coast. 107 

widowed wife of the first Presbyterian missionary in New Mexico. 
She was induced to go to Alaska to take charge of the young 
mission. When she arrived with Dr. Jackson at Fort Wrangel, 
on passing down the street, they saw an Indian ringing a hand- 
bell. It was Clah calling scholars to his school, which was held 
in a disused dance-hall. Mrs. McFarland was the only Chris- 
tian white woman in a territory as large as France. For seven 
months she was the only Protestant missionary in Alaska, and 
for a year the only one at Fort Wrangel. All the perplexities 
of the people, religious, physical, social, and moral, were brought 
to her for solution. If any were sick, they came to her as a phy- 
sician ; if any were dead, she was called upon to take charge of 
the funeral. If husbands and wives became separated, she was 
the peacemaker to bring them together. If difficulties arose as 
to property, she was judge, lawyer, and jury. If feuds arose 
among tribes or families, she was arbitress. When the Indians 
called" a convention, she was elected " chairman." She was 
called upon to interfere in cases of witchcraft ; and when a white 
man was hanged for murder, she became his spiritual adviser. 
Her fame went far and wide among the tribes. Great chiefs 
came long distances to enter the school of " the woman that 
loved their people." She had charge of both school and church, 
in both of which she was greatly aided by Clah and another 
Fort Simpson Indian. Alas ! before the year was out, Clah died 
of consumption at the early age of thirty years. His privations, 
probably, shortened his life. His salary was only ten dollars a 
month, on which to keep himself and wife and child, and pay 
rent ; and he lived month after month almost entirely on fish. 
As he lay upon his death-bed, his great anxiety was lest his wife 
and child should suffer for want of food. Mrs. McFarland 
assured him that they would be cared for. As he was dying, he 
said, " As earth fades away, heaven grows brighter ; " and turning 
to his weeping wife, he said, "Annie, you must not cry; Jesus 
knows what is best." He was buried by Christian Indians at 
Fort Simpson. Dr. Jackson gives his portrait a fine, intelli- 
gent face and that of Mrs. McFarland a countenance of noble 
and commanding expression. 

The Presbyterian Church has grandly sustained this mission, 
contributing in two years $12,000. They have now a church, 
school, hospital, and industrial home the latter an imperious 



108 



Canadian Methodist Magazine. 



necessity to rescue girls who would otherwise fall victims to the 
vice of wicked white men. For the same purpose Mrs. Crosby 
has opened a Home for Indian girls at Fort Simpson, which has 




been supported hitherto by the contributions of a few friends. 
Its maintenance is fitting work for the Women's Missionary 
Society, now being organized in Canada. The need for" such a 
home may be inferred from the following pathetic appeal for that 



Indian Missions on the Notth Pacific Coast. 109 

at Fort Wrangel : " you mothers of dear young girls every 
one whose home is made fairer by a daughter's face give some- 
thing to save these other girls from shame and anguish some- 
thing to help us teach those other mothers how great a boon a 
maiden may be at their own fireside." The results of our Metho- 
dist mission at Fort Simpson have been most salutary and most 
marked. The converted Indians have exhibited a high Chris- 
tian character. They carry their religion with them wherever 
they go. They travel thousands of miles, but neither wind, tide, 
hunger, nor the urgency of their white employers can induce 
them to travel on the Lord's day. They yearn to tell their 
countrymen the story of the cross. They sorrow over the ravages 
made by the white man's vices, the white man's diseases, and 
the white man's fire-water. " We see no difference," said one, 
"between killing men with whiskey and killing them with a 
gun." Our own heroic Crosby has imperilled his own life by 
his determined opposition to the liquor traffic, leading some- 
times to the forcible destruction of the casks of liquor in a 
drunken Indian camp. 

The day-school at Fort Simpson numbers about 120, and a 
large Sunday-school, in three sections, is taught by Mr. and Mrs. 
Crosby and Miss Knott. In two years sixty new houses have 
been built by the Indians, and the whole tribe are being raised 
to a higher plane of civilization. The Church has a member- 
ship of 258. Mr. Crosby has established an annual industrial 
fair, at which prizes are given for the best carving in wood and 
silver, the best gardens and vegetables, the best sashes and doors, 
best cured salmon, etc. 

As at Fort Simpson and Fort Wrangel, so at Naas Kiver, it 
was converted Indians who became the pioneer missionaries to 
their pagan countrymen. The mission authorities of our Church 
were unable, when an appeal was made them for this station, to 
incur any further expense. But at a prayer-meeting held in the 
house of Mr. McKay, in the same room in which the first meeting 
was held in 1869 to promote the spiritual welfare of the Indians 
of Victoria, spontaneous contributions of $236 were given, and 
the Kev. A. E. Greene was sent as a missionary to Naas Eiver. 
He and Mr. Crosby held a five days' meeting, and a glorious 
revival began. Soon a congregation of 500 attended the services 
and 100 met in class. The work spread throughout the surround- 



110 



Canadian Methodist Magazine. 



ing country, and from the forks of the Skeena to Kit-a-mat and 
Bella-Bella and Queen Charlotte's Island all the result, together 
with the flourishing missions in Alaska, (may we not say ?) of 




TOTEM POLES, FORT WEANGEL. 



that memorable prayer-meeting held in the house of a God- 
fearing Methodist at Victoria, eleven years ago. 

Any one interested in the cause of missions and what Chris- 



Indian Missions on the North Pacific Coast. Ill 

tian is not ? will find this wonderful story recorded, with many 
details which we have to omit, in Dr. Jackson's admirable book 
on " Alaska and the Missions of the North Pacific Coast " a story 
of more absorbing fascination than a romance. The book gives 
also an interesting account of the extent and resources of that 
country, of its villages and native tribes, their manners and 
customs, of their revolting pagan usages, and of the wonderful 
change being wrought by Christian missions. 




AW^\^\W>^^ . ;\ w A\^;P 

TATOOED INDIAN, NORTH PACIFIC COAST. 

To the cuts taken from that volume we now make a brief 
reference. In the northern part of Alaska, which reaches far 
within the Arctic circle, the inhabitants dwell in dome-shaped 
snow-huts, built of large blocks of congealed snow, as shown in 
cut on page 101. The entrance is through a long winding 
passage, screened by a curtain of sealskin, and passing through a 
low vestibule. The interior of these huts is more commodious 
than would be expected, giving shelter to a large number of 
persons. A raised dais of snow, covered with furs, runs round 
the wall, and a fire of seal or walrus oil, blazing in a stone vessel, 



112 



Canadian Methodist Magazine. 



furnishes light and heat for cooking and comfort. See cut on 
page 102, which represents a noisy native drum dance. 

The walrus is hunted on the immense ice floes. The huge 
creature comes to the air-holes in the ice to breathe, and is har- 




pooned by the natives, who exhibit great skill and daring in this 
dangerous pursuit. 

Further south the Indians obtain their living almost exclu- 



Indian Missions on the North Pacific Coast. 113 

sivety by fishing, agriculture being almost unknown. There is 
probably no finer fishing-ground in the world than that of British 
Columbia and Southern Alaska. Salmon of the finest quality 
may be literally pitchforked out of the streams in cart loads, and 
are now being largely exported in cans. But one will grow 
weary of even the best salmon, with nothing else, and the great 
want of the country is an agricultural population. Many of the 
fishing villages are of a very rude and flimsy construction ; but 
some of the houses are well built of cedar plank, as shown in 
the cut on page 108. 

Opposite the chiefs house will be seen huge totem poles, 
carved with grotesque human or bird-headed figures. The greater 
the chief the taller the pole, which sometimes reaches an altitude 
of over 100 feet. 

The pagan Indians are often of a very degraded and forbidding 
appearance, which they make still more repulsive by the habit 
of tattooing the face in the manner shown in the initial cut, and 
in that on page 111. Their heathen ceremonies are often loath- 
some and semi-cannibal ritea, or hideous orgies, where drunken- 
ness and every form of vice runs to all manner of excess and 
riot. Yet out of human beings dragged down by sin to such 
degradation, Divine grace has brought such noble natures as 
Amos Sa-hat-ston, the ex-conjurer, and Clah, the faithful mis- 
sionary. And under the influence of the Gospel, the heathen 
dance and wild orgies of vice have given place to the devout 
worship of God by a Christian congregation. Is not this moral 
transformation more than a tenfold compensation for all the toil 
and money expended on the Indian missions of our Church? 
and an incentive and summons to greater zeal in a cause which 
God has so abundantly honoured and blessed ? 



THE DEAD. 

In your patience ye are strong ; 
Cold and heat ye take not wrong ; 

When the trumpet of the angel 

Blows Eternity's evangel, 
Time will seem to you not long. 

E. B. Browning. 



I 



114 ) 




JAPANESE TEMPLE.