Subseries 1 - Board of Missions

Identity area

Reference code

CA MHC ORG-B-1

Title

Board of Missions

Date(s)

  • 1922-1979; predominant 1963-1970 (Creation)

Level of description

Subseries

Extent and medium

11.2 m of textual material

Context area

Name of creator

(1956-1971)

Administrative history

-created to consolidate the work of the previous "Foreign Missions Committee" and "Home Missions Committee"
-the CMC Foreign Missions Committee had existed since 1949
-Mennonite Pioneer Mission (MPM) which had its origin in the Bergthaler Mennonite Church of Manitoba began to merge with the CMC Board of Mission over a 3 year period beginning in 1957.
-in 1971 the Conference of Mennonites in Canada accepted a re-structuring proposal. Home missions activities went to the newly created Congregational Resources Board; the Mission Board was referred to as "Mennonite Pioneer Mission Board" and changed its name to "Native Ministries Board" in 1972.
Executive secretaries:
-David P. Neufeld, 1961-1964 (part-time for Board of Missions)
-Menno Wiebe, 1964-1973 (full-time for Board of Missions/Native Ministries)

Archival history

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Content and structure area

Scope and content

Much of this material consists of correspondence with individual mission stations. Approximatly 0.5 meters of the material in these files dates from before 1962. Among this material are minutes (1940-1971), reports, and correspondence (1943-1959). The oldest Board of Missions material is the financial ledger for the years 1914-1957. This ledger was begun by G.G. Epp and was maintained by P.P. Epp from 1927-1931. Both these men served as treasurer for the Missions Committee.

The David Toews files, is only indirectly related to the CMC Board of Missions. Toews served as field secretary responsible for the Canadian operations of the Home Missions Board of the General Conference Mennonite Church (1917-1946) and as member of the CMC Committee for Home Missions from 1943-1945, but the majority of these records are related to his General Conference involvements. The correspondence has all been filed alphabetically. One file of material in these records pertains to the CMC Archives but it appears to have been created by J.J. Thiessen, not by David Toews. The bulk of the material relates to the assistance which the General Conference provided for the creation of new churches in Canada in the years 1923-1946.

The H.J. Gerbrandt files reflect his involvement as field secretary (1959-1960) and secretary (1961-1965) of the Mission Board, as well as his service with Mennonite Pioneer Mission. Most of the material consists of correspondence, minutes, and reports. The files employ an alphabetical filing system.

The George Groening records contain a total of 1.36 meters of correspondence, minutes, agendas, and reports (both general and local) from the years 1948-1966. The H.H. Penner files cover approximately the same period as the Groening files and the types of material are quite similar as well. There is no obvious filing order in the collection.
The Mennonite Pioneer Mission (MPM) was operated by the conference of Mennonites in Canada since 1960. Some pre-1960 records in these files seem to have been transferred to the Conference in 1960. The J.N. Braun treasurer files (1942-1961) fall into this category. The early financial records of Mennonite Pioneer Mission are not entirely complete. Some of the pre-1949 ledgers were retained by the Bergthaler Mennonite Church of Manitoba, founders of the Mennonite Pioneer Mission. The files also contain correspondence for the years 1931-1948. Finally there are also minutes of the MPM Board for the years 1944-1959. The post-1960 period the MPM files were generated by the CMC Board of Missions' executive secretaries. They were responsible for overseeing all MPM operations. There is considerable correspondence with people from the various mission stations.

This record sub-series has intriguing research possibilities. The materials are useful for studying the history of several northern Manitoba native communities or the history of missions in Canada, and for doing cross-cultural studies. There are also possibilities for demographic studies, especially with regard to migration of Mennonites in Canada. The Board of Missions files could also be of considerable interest to the local historians who is trying to reconstruct the church development in their community.

Appraisal, destruction and scheduling

Accruals

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Language and script notes

Some German especially for records prior to 1960. Mennonite Pioneer Mission files are usually in English for earlier dates.

Physical characteristics and technical requirements

90% typewritten.

Finding aids

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Related units of description

MHC Audio reel to reel collections: 32 ; MHC Audio cassettes collections: 8-9.
MHC Photograph Collections: 89, 95-97, 298, 491.

Related descriptions

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Physical storage

  • Box: Volumes