Morriston
Many of the earliest settlers in Puslinch were from Germany. They tended to settle along the Brock Road, mainly near what became the village of Morriston where German culture prevailed for some years. A Catholic Church was built by Alex Ochs in the village. By 1919 it had been demolished. The Protestant Church was the Evangelische Gemeind (Evangelical Brethren, now the United Church). Other Germans also settled on the Brock Road closer to Guelph.
The PHS has extensive files on these German families (available on request) and Chris Bowman's book charts the origins and first two or three Canadian generations in the Township. Marjorie Clark's Our Village of Morriston is the classic study of the village. Betty Woolsey has researched the history of each Morriston building to the extent possible and collected the material in three volumes..
Below are the names of all, or almost all, of the German families who lived in Puslinch at one time or another.
Bach Bartels Barth Bauman Bechtel Becker Beese Bender Bergerow\
Bergey Bernhardt Bieber(Beaver) Binkley Bohlert Bott Bowman Braun(Brown) Broeckel
Burmeister Calfass Call Castoff(Kerstoff) Connawarf Decker Diemert Dunkie Durst
Elfner Fahrner Fetter Feuerstein Finkbeiner Fischer Frey Fritz Fuhry Gaiser
Gayer Gregor Guggisberg Habermehl Haist Hart Heath Heckendorn Henhoeffer
Hingleman Hohberge Hohenadel Holm Hornbostel Huether Jacobs Joseph Kaercher
Kaiser Kellerman Kistenmacher Kraft Kuneman Lehman Leitch Lorentz Martin
Mast Mathies Meder Metzger Moatz/Motz Morlock Mudhank Munch Munthwaite
Nettney Neubauer Obrecht Ochs Pfluger Preszcator/Piscador Quillman Rappolt Rau
Roll Rothermel Saurs Schatz Scheer Schlegal Schleh Schmidt Schnepf Schultz Schwartzenberger Sieber Stahl Steffler Stein Stoesser Stremble Theile Vogt Wagner Waltz Weltzer Winer Wise/Wyse Wurtz
The German Evangelical Church
The Church, under its present name, came into being in 1975.
At that time, Mount Carmel United Church in Aberfoyle and Zion United
Church in Morriston amalgamated, thus forming Mount Carmel-Zion United Church.
The
history of the Morriston Church is long and varied, being first known as the
Evangelical Association. Later, the
name was changed to The Evangelical Church, and when the parent church in the
United States united with the United Brethren Church, it was changed once again
to The Evangelical United Brethren Church.
In January, 1968, the Canada Conference of this denomination joined the
United Church of Canada and is now part of that family.
The
work began with the early German settlers who came to this area, bringing with
them their Christian traditions. At
first they met in their homes, with someone taking the place of the “class
leader” and reading a sermon from a book.
It was not
until 1952 that there was a basement under the church where Sunday School
classes and social gatherings could be held.
According to the 1851
census, it held 100 people. The log
church was on the Brock Road (now the busy No. 6 highway) in the middle of the
village block on the west side, where the home of G. Warner now stands.
It was later turned into a stable used by the hotel, and has since been
demolished.
Up until that time,
church suppers were held either in the small vestry or in the Foresters’ Hall
at the foot of Church Street, where now stands Historic Park.
This meant much carrying of dishes and food up and down the Church Street
hill.
Under
the leadership of the Rev. E.E. Dorsch, the basement project was planned and
carried out with the help of many willing volunteers.
Burrowing under the church floor was
the
beginning of the work and meant digging 26,000 cu. feet of earth and passing it
out bucketful by bucketful, a gigantic task.
In
1911, a system of acetylene gas lighting was installed in the church.
This served until the Hydro came to the community in the 1920’s.
However, coal oil lamps were always kept filled and ready in case the gas
failed which it frequently did. The
present lights are a memorial to J. Howard Winer, a lifetime worker in the
congregation.
Heating has also
improved over the years. The two
large box stoves, with long lengths of pipe, and those hungry wood boxes behind
them, are a thing of the far past. Next
came the oil burners which had a habit of going out.
Then came a coal furnace when the basement was put in; this, in turn, was
adapted to oil, and then a new oil furnace
was
installed. The year 1990 saw one
more step when this was replaced by a high efficiency gas furnace.
Morriston
circuit was at one time one of the strongest and most promising in the
Conference. It took in, besides
Morriston, Ancaster, Waterdown, Beverly, Hespeler, Preston and Galt, but by
1880 these other points had been absorbed by the surrounding areas.
It is interesting to note that, on April 10, 1862, the 14th Annual
Conference in Canada was held in Morriston.
Sons from two prominent church families entered the Christian ministry,
John C. Morlock and John W.L. Huether.
The
Morlock family had great musical talent and the choir of Morriston Church sang
as guests in nearby churches.
Miss Louisa Morlock was the church organist for forty years.
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article was contri

German Evangelical Brethren Church and Parsonage