b:r_bowen
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This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.
b:r_bowen [2024/10/06 11:28] – created sallyr | b:r_bowen [2025/04/16 09:42] (current) – sallyr | ||
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Richard John Bowen (1868 – 1952) | Richard John Bowen (1868 – 1952) | ||
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- | Richard Bowen trained with the Church Missionary Society at Islington College, London in 1894.((The Anglican Church of Canada, General Synod Archives, R.J. Bowen fonds.)) In July 1895, Bowen, a Clapham Institution student, was at the mouth of the Yukon River. He had been sent to work for Bishop Bompas as a carpenter and was to be supported at Buxton Mission by funds at the bishop’s disposal.((// | ||
- | Shortly after Bowen arrived, Bompas was prevailed upon to lend him to the mission | + | Richard |
- | Missionary teacher Susan Mellet left Ireland and arrived at Forty Mile in 1893. Bowen and Mellett were married by Bishop Bompas at Forty Mile in 1896.((// | + | |
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- | Bowen had been ordained as a Church | + | |
- | Rev. Bowen served at Nanaimo and Ladysmith, British Columbia from 1907 to 1925 and was the district secretary of the Bible Society.((Hannah Tolman, //Women of the Anglican Church in the Yukon.// Whitehorse: The Old Log Church Museum, 2019: 4-6.)) He was licensed in the Diocese of Huron from 1930 to 1952.((The Anglican Church of Canada, General Synod Archives, R.J. Bowen fonds.)) | + | Bowen arrived at St. Michael, Alaska on 29 June 1895 and met the first boat coming from the interior, the sternwheeler Arctic, on July16th. Mrs. Selina Bompas was on the boat, coming to welcome the new missionary to the diocese. They travelled together up the Yukon River to the Buxton Mission, at the mouth of the Fortymile River. It was the last boat of the season and Bowen was greeted by Rev. Bompas who immediately took passage on the Arctic to visit communities upriver from the mission. Bowen was left in charge of Mrs. Bompas, teacher and matron Miss McDonald, and nine mixed blood school children. The community included the mission on an island upsteam of the mining community of Forty Mile, and the under construction North-West Mounted Police compound across the Fortymile River.((Richard Bowen, “Incidents in the Life of The Reverend Richard John Bowen.” Pages 40, 56-58. |
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+ | Bowen’s direction was to work with the Indigenous population and he held services at Buxton Mission and travelled to the mouth of the Klondike River and to Ketchemstock in Alaska. However, Bishop Bompas was most worried about the lack of morality among the miners adversely affecting his teachings to the First Nations and encouraged Bowen to visit the miners, freighters, saloon keepers, gamblers and readers and get to know the community. He travelled with a freighter on a two-week trip to the miners on Glacier and Miller creeks in November 1895.((Richard Bowen, “Incidents in the Life of The Reverend Richard John Bowen.” Pages 68, 70, 76, 78. Government of Canada, Libraries and Archives, 2025 website: Collection search - Richard John Bowen fonds [textual record])) Eventually, Bishop Bompas told Bowen to severe his relationship with the Church Missionary Society and dedicate himself to a ministry in the Forty Mile community. Bompas appealed to the Colonial and Continental Church Society in London and the organization offered a grant of $500 arrived to support Bowen’s new mission. Bowen took the logs from a half-built dancehall at Buxton and hauled them down to Forty Mile to build a church. Bompas purchased the logs as he disapproved of the project.((Richard Bowen, “Incidents in the Life of The Reverend Richard John Bowen.” Pages 132-133. Government of Canada, Libraries and Archives, 2025 website: Collection search - Richard John Bowen fonds [textual record])) In May 1896, Bowen began services as the first Yukon church devoted to the miners.((H.A. Cody, //An Apostle of the North.// University of Alberta Press, 2002 (reprint): 281-282.)) | ||
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+ | That spring there was a rush of miners and prospectors from Forty Mile to Circle, Alaska. New missionaries, | ||
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+ | News was arriving at Circle about the gold strike on the Klondike River and Bowen watched his congregation dwindle again as miners left for the new strike. He received word from Bishop Bompas to take up duties back in his own diocese but in Dawson where he knew many of the men. He left Circle in early June and reached Forty Mile on 10 June 1897 where he met the missionary teacher Susan Mellett. Bowen arrived in Dawson on the 17 June 1897. His first chore was to move the previous missionary’s house out of the area chosen by Constantine for the Police Reserve and rebuilt it at the current site of St. Paul’s Anglican church. Frederick Flewelling’s 20’ x 16’ log rectory, may have been the first house built in Dawson, erected in 1896. ((Richard Bowen, “Incidents in the Life of The Reverend Richard John Bowen.” Pages 164, 167, 169-170, 173-174, 183-184. Government of Canada, Libraries and Archives, 2025 website: Collection search - Richard John Bowen fonds [textual record])) | ||
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+ | Hearing that Bishop Bompas was ill, Bowen travelled to Forty Mile where Bompas discussed his plan of having Bowen and Millet marry and stay at Forty Mile while Bompas took over the newly-established church at Dawson and get much needed medical care for his scurvy. However, Bompas condition worsened, and he travelled back to Forty Mile where Susan Bowen cared for him until the boat arrived in the spring of 1898 with Mrs. Bompas as a passenger. At this point, Susan joined Richard Bowen in Dawson. ((Richard Bowen, “Incidents in the Life of The Reverend Richard John Bowen.” Pages 175-179, 182. Government of Canada, Libraries and Archives, 2025 website: Collection search - Richard John Bowen fonds [textual record])) Bowen was busy trying to get a church erected and furnished with the help of Mr. McLeod, a carpenter from Winnipeg. He joined the mission as a teacher and Industrial Missionary and Bowen hoped he would start industrial classes for the First Nations. McLeod resigned the mission and took up mining but not before the church was erected and furnished in the fall of 1898.((Richard Bowen, “Incidents in the Life of The Reverend Richard John Bowen.” Page 189-190. Government of Canada, Libraries and Archives, 2025 website: Collection search - Richard John Bowen fonds [textual record])) | ||
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+ | Rev. Bowen contracted typhoid malarial fever in May 1898 [1899] and he and Susan returned to England for his convalescence. Bishop Bompas promised not to call them unless he was desperate, and the call came within the year to build a church at Whitehorse. The Bowens came in on the second passenger train after the White Pass railroad was finished in 1900.((// | ||
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+ | In the spring of 1903, Bowen became seriously ill again, and the Bowens left the Yukon for good in May.[Bowen' | ||
+ | Rev. Bowen served at Nanaimo and Ladysmith, British Columbia from 1907 to 1925 and was the district secretary of the Bible Society.((Hannah Tolman, //Women of the Anglican Church in the Yukon.// Whitehorse: The Old Log Church Museum, 2019: 6.)) He was licensed in the Diocese of Huron from 1930 to 1952.((The Anglican Church of Canada, General Synod Archives, R.J. Bowen fonds.)) | ||
Bowen’s little concertina and the tools he used to build the log church are held at the Old Log Church Museum in Whitehorse. | Bowen’s little concertina and the tools he used to build the log church are held at the Old Log Church Museum in Whitehorse. | ||
b/r_bowen.txt · Last modified: 2025/04/16 09:42 by sallyr