mclachlan_john
Differences
This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.
| Both sides previous revisionPrevious revisionNext revision | Previous revision | ||
| mclachlan_john [] – johnw41 | mclachlan_john [] (current) – external edit 127.0.0.1 | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
| (died 24 Oct. 1856, in his 52nd year), clergyman. (This date of death from St. Finnan’s records, which give 26 Oct. as date of burial; memorial tablet says died 26 Oct.) He is said to have had an Aberdeen, Scotland, background. At the time of his death, he was in the 27th year of his priesthood. He was the pastor of St. Finnan’s Parish, Alexandria, from Nov. 1853 till his death. Fr McLachlan’s efforts to establish a Roman Catholic school in Alexandria, either by changing the existing non-denominational school into a Roman Catholic school or by creating a new Separate School, caused a rancorous clash with Donald A. Macdonald of the Sandfield family, who opposed the measure as divisive in the community and unfair to the area Protestants who had helped to establish the existing school. Fr McLachlan, however, was successful. He brought the Christian Brothers to Alexandria (arrived 1854) to teach the boys, and the Sisters of Holy Cross (arrived Jan. 1856) to teach the girls. The Sisters of Holy Cross were to be an Alexandria institution for more than a century. The quarrel with Donald A. Macdonald (during which Macdonald sued Fr McLachlan for defamation of character, and lost) had political significance, | (died 24 Oct. 1856, in his 52nd year), clergyman. (This date of death from St. Finnan’s records, which give 26 Oct. as date of burial; memorial tablet says died 26 Oct.) He is said to have had an Aberdeen, Scotland, background. At the time of his death, he was in the 27th year of his priesthood. He was the pastor of St. Finnan’s Parish, Alexandria, from Nov. 1853 till his death. Fr McLachlan’s efforts to establish a Roman Catholic school in Alexandria, either by changing the existing non-denominational school into a Roman Catholic school or by creating a new Separate School, caused a rancorous clash with Donald A. Macdonald of the Sandfield family, who opposed the measure as divisive in the community and unfair to the area Protestants who had helped to establish the existing school. Fr McLachlan, however, was successful. He brought the Christian Brothers to Alexandria (arrived 1854) to teach the boys, and the Sisters of Holy Cross (arrived Jan. 1856) to teach the girls. The Sisters of Holy Cross were to be an Alexandria institution for more than a century. The quarrel with Donald A. Macdonald (during which Macdonald sued Fr McLachlan for defamation of character, and lost) had political significance, | ||
| - | < | + | < |
mclachlan_john.1628536768.txt.gz · Last modified: (external edit)
