This photo is of Abram and Susanna Wieler and their family. Standing in the back row from left to right are: Peter, Alfred, Irmgard, Henry (Heinz), and John Dyck. Seated in the first row are: Esther, Bradley, Susanna, Brenda, Abram Wieler, and Edith.
A formal photograph of four generations of Teichroeb men. Left to right: Abram G. Teichroeb (1884-1969), Abe Teichroeb (1932-2017), A.A. Teichroeb (1907-1991), Melvin Teichroeb (child seated on armrest).
Formal photo. Used in the CM 5-41-8 announcement that he and his wife Linda (Schultz) were ordained at the Ninga Mennonite Church on September 29, 1957.
Used in CM 10-3-1. Group photo of the 16 men who were part of the Extension Com. of the Man. Evangelical churches who met to plan for outreach. See CM for names. Neg for photo and 4 additional ones.
Negatives also (3). Contact sheet, 4 photos 6x6. One used in CM 17-24-1; see 1994-14.779 for this enlargement. One of Victor Krieger? & others on platform of Portagechurch 2 photos at Steinbach Museum besdie sign, beside monument.
Negatives only (4). Committee meets with Henry Weaver, 1957. Henry Weaver Jr. was sec. for radio evangelism of the Mennonite Church in Harrisonburg, Va. Discussions prior to beginning of MRM? See the CM 4-9-6.
Negatives for both photos. 2nd photo, same pose (16.5x11) but they are looking down & smiling more. Missionaries who spoke at the mission conf. of 20 Man. Bergthaler Mennonite & other churches. l-r: (seated) Rev. & Mrs. J. M. Unrau, Mennonite Pioneer Mission, Man.; Mrs. S. T. Moyer; (standing) Rev. W. E. Harder, GC. missionary to Africa; S. T. Moyer, GC missionaries to India; Rev. C. J. Smith, mission to lepers; Rev. Peter Voran, GC. missionary to Japan.
Southern Man. Crusade for Christ. Local committee members? H. Lenzman, sec., 1st at left & H. J. Gerbrandt, chair, 2nd from left. See CM 11-21-12 for other names. Reference prints with neg.
This collection of photos show some aspects of the work of Mennonite Pioneer Mission, an outreach ministry begun by the Bergthaler Mennonite Church of Manitoba, which became part of Conference of Mennonites in Canada in the early 1970s, changing the name in 1974 to Native Ministries, a ministry of Conference of Mennonites in Canada.