On the grounds of Picton United Church, Chapel and Mary streets, Picton

Commemoration

In 1824, the first Methodist "Canada Conference," which resulted in the separation of the Canadian and U.S. churches, was held in a recently completed frame chapel that originally stood on this site. Built by a congregation that had been established in 1793 by Darius Dunham, an itinerant preacher from the U.S., and led by a local settler, Andrew Johnson, it was also the site for a meeting in 1831 that settled the location of a Methodist "Seminary of Learning" at Cobourg. Named the "Upper Canada Academy," this institution later developed into the present Victoria University. The present church, erected in 1898, is the third to stand on this site.

Background

The American Methodist Church was active in recruiting British subjects who had left the new United States for Upper Canada.  The Canadian Church separated from its American counterpart here but did not join the British Methodist Church active in Eastern Canada.