Headford United Church
Table of Contents

Title Page
Introduction
Carrville United Church
Headford United Church
Holy Trinity Anglican Church
Richmond Hill Presbyterian Church
Richmond Hill United Church
St. John the Baptist Anglican Church
St. Luke's Roman Catholic Church
St. Mary's Anglican Church
Temperanceville United Church

The origin of the United Church at Headford goes back to 1850, when Leek's Chapel, a frame Methodist Episcopal Church, was constructed on a 1/2 acre parcel of the Ritter farm, Lot 18, Concession 2, Markham Township. At the time, the congregation was part of the Markham circuit, formed in 1847, consisting of Leek's, Sparta and Forsyth's. In the 1850's, a burying ground was established in association with the church.

By 1882, the congregation had outgrown the original building, and the present brick church was built on the same site to replace it. When the Wesleyan, Primitive and Episcopalian Methodists united in 1884, Headford became a part of the Richmond Hill circuit. With the union of the Methodists, Presbyterians and Congregationalists in 1925, Headford became a member of the United Church of Canada.

The simple design of the church follows the Classical architectural tradition of symmetry, with a rectangular plan, a tower incorporating the main entrance centred on the east gable end, and a balanced arrangement of window openings. To the basic Classical form, the designer added elements of the Early Gothic Revival, including lancet windows with wooden sash, a rose window, buttresses, and a steep gable roof. The use of patterned brick, including white brick accents on a background of red brick, is characteristic of mid to late 19th century ecclesiastical architecture, echoing the richly decorated wall surfaces promoted by English philospher and architectural theorist John Ruskin.

The ornate wrought iron hinges on the double-leaf front doors, are also significant features, as are the marble plaque upon which the original denomination of the church and its date of construction are inscribed, the louvered openings in the towwer, the bracketed eaves of the tower's roof, and the balustrade that surmounts the tower. Also significant are the segmentally-headed basement windows and the small wing housing the exterior entrance to the basement.

Significant features of the cemetery include marble and granite headstones marking the resting places of many of the families who settled in the Headford community, including the graves of founding members of the congregation. The earliest burials date back to the 1850's.

Description of Headford United Church is courtesy of the Richmond Hill Local Architectural Conservation Advisory Committee (LACAC).

To browse through the cemetery, click here.

 


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