Isaac’s Harbour United Baptist Church
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Historical Information
The Baptist Church in Isaac’s Harbour, Nova Scotia, was built in 1881. It was originally known as the First Baptist Church and is the third Baptist church building in the community. The Baptist Church is valued as a reminder of the community’s former prominence in the fisheries and for its simple, unadorned construction. The current church replaced one that blew down in the “August Gale” of 1873, which in turn had replaced one built in 1840 that became too small for the congregation. The shipwrights who built the current church re-enforced the steeple and roof with ship’s knee joints and mortised and tenoned beams. Due to its position of height on the shore, it was used as a navigational aid for ships entering the harbour. The church is extremely large, but shortly after its completion it proved to be too small for the growing congregation, and a second church was built across the harbour in Goldboro. The belfry on the front steeple blew down in a gale, of which the date is unknown, and the original brass bell acquired in 1899 is now on display in the upper gallery. The height of the church is accented because its basement is totally exposed on the street elevation while totally buried on the rear. Consequently, one must enter the front of the church via a basement entrance on the front and then take one of two arched stairways to the main church floor above. The rear of the church can be accessed off ground level through a rear door. It has a gable end roof and no protruding chancel. In 2012 this church was demolished, all that remains is the bell and a monument for the building.
Information and images from Canada Historic Places