Historic northern church prepared for upcoming wildfire season
Peaceful, powerful and proud are some of the words Lac La Ronge Indian Band Chief Tammy Cook-Searson used to describe the feelings evoked by the Holy Trinity Anglican Church near Stanley Mission.
“When I go in there, I’m just in awe,” she said of the 159-year-old church. “It seems really peaceful in there. It just has a powerful feeling to it when you’re inside. It’s one of those things you can’t put a value on. It’s so valuable.”
When Rev. Robert Hunt departed England in 1849 to establish an Anglican mission in Northern Saskatchewan, he left prepared to build a large church and brought with him hinges, latches, locks, window frames, stained glass and other materials that remain there to this day. Cook-Searson stated the site of the church was chosen through talks with First Nations who knew the river system, adding it was a spot local people believed would be the best for the structure. The Holy Trinity Anglican Church is the oldest standing building in Saskatchewan and became a National Historic Site of Canada in 1970.