Sandwich First Baptist Church National Historic Site
Sandwich First Baptist Church was designated a national historic site in 2000.
Commemorative plaque: 3652 Peter Street, Windsor, OntarioFootnote 1
Erected in 1851 on land donated by the Crown, the Sandwich First Baptist Church represents the once numerous Black border-town churches which were built to serve the rapidly increasing numbers of Underground Railroad settlers. This church received, sheltered, and assisted many of these new arrivals. All members were required to aid in its construction by giving donations or making bricks. A focal point for many local anti-slavery activities, the Sandwich First Baptist Church stands as an important symbol of that struggle.
Description of historic place
Sandwich First Baptist Church National Historic Site of Canada is a picturesque brick church located in the former border town of Sandwich, now part of the City of Windsor, Ontario. It is a small, brick, gable-roofed church set close to the street, that exhibits the vernacular qualities of simplicity, modest scale and limited decorative embellishment typical of the many auditory hall-style churches built by Underground Railroad refugee communities in mid-nineteenth century Upper Canada. The designated place is the building defined by its footprint at the time of designation (1999).
Heritage value
Sandwich First Baptist Church was designated a national historic site of Canada in 1999 because: it is representative of the once more numerous churches in border towns and villages built by black congregations to accommodate the growing communities created by the arriving Underground Railroad refugees; the establishment of this church and its Black congregation is directly related to the formation of the Amherst Regular Missionary Baptist Association.
Originally associated with the 19th-century establishment of an African Canadian community of refugees from slavery arriving via the Underground Railroad, Sandwich First Baptist Church is one of the oldest Baptist churches surviving from this period in Ontario. Sandwich First Baptist Church received, sheltered, and assisted new Canadians arriving on the Underground Railroad. As a black community church next to the American border, it was a focal point for many anti-slavery activities and is directly related to the formation of the Amherstburg Regular Missionary Baptist Association.
Built on land donated by the Crown in 1851, the church required that all members aid in its construction by giving donations or making bricks from local materials. Over the years the building was embellished, as with the addition of its crenellated entry tower. The heritage value of Sandwich First Baptist Church resides in its associated history as illustrated by the location, composition, and materials of the building itself.
Source Sources: Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada, Minutes, January 2005, November 1999.
Related links
- National historic designations
- National historic persons
- National historic sites designations
- National historic events
- Submit a nomination
- The Salem Sanctuary Of History
- This Week in History: Reverend Jennie Johnson (1868–1967)
- Historica Canada - Heritage Minutes - Underground Railroad
- Underground Railroad National Historic Event
- Harriet Tubman National Historic Person
- Thornton and Lucie Blackburn National Historic People
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