Trinity College School - Record Yearbook (Port Hope, Ontario Canada)

 - Class of 1955

Page 18 of 614

 

Trinity College School - Record Yearbook (Port Hope, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1955 Edition, Page 18 of 614
Page 18 of 614



Trinity College School - Record Yearbook (Port Hope, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1955 Edition, Page 17
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Page 18 text:

6 TRINITY COLLEGE SOHOOL RECORD Vancouver, Chaplain overseas, Dean of New Westminster, Bishop of Athabaska, Rector of St. Paul's, Toronto, for eleven years Bishop of Moosonee, Metropolitan of Ontario. Truly a giant among men whose deeds and words, char- acter and personality will never be forgotten. It is his humanity and humility which win so many hearts, for truly there never was one in our time who loved his fellowman, saint or sinner, high or low, white or brown, as does the Archbishop. When he passes by, the world smiles and life is more sweet, long may his familiar and beloved figure tread our paths. And in retirement may he have more time for his reading and writing, and for his family. The School will always acclaim him as one of its three or four most distinguished men. The following tribute appeared in the Globe Sz Mail on September 8: Part of the history of Northern Ontario came to an end today with the retirement, on his seventy-ninth birthday, of the Mast Reverend Robert J. Renison, Archbishop of Moonsonee and Metropolitan of the Ecclesiastical Province of Ontario in the Anglican Church. It is an occasion at once sad and triumphant. Those who know him, and that includes a very large proportion of the readers of this newspaper, are aware that only the onrushing tide of the years could have torn this great heart from its labors. But the restrain- ing touch of time has not come before mighty works have been done and a lifetime of accomplishment rarely achieved. Archbishop Renison's life has by no means been wholly spent in the North, but there is little doubt that the North, with its primitive challenges, its wilderness beauty and the simplicity and integrity of character of the Indian inhab- itants, has entered into his very soul. There, through all the changing fortunes of his life, he has been happiest. As a young man, and in his later years, when most ordinary men would have been thinking of easing up, he has ranged the woods and the rivers, in camp and settlement, bringing the message of the Christian Gospel to the people who made their homes beyond the frontier. He came by this predilection naturally. As a boy, his father brought him from his birthplace in Tipperary, Ireland, to the North when the father became an Anglican missionary

Page 17 text:

TRINITY COLLEGE SCHOOL RECORD 5 Those boys presently attending the School should ad- dress their letters simply to the Record, and deposit them in the slot now available for the return of borrowed books, in the Library. Old Boys should address their letters as follows: THE EDITORS OF THE RECORD, cfo TRINITY COLLEGE SCHOOL, PORT HOPE, ONTARIO. Thanking you for your co-operation in this new under- taking. The Editors. P.S.-All letters should be signed either personally, or by some suitable pseudonym. Unsigned letters will not be considered for publication. THE ARCHBISHOP When we heard that Archbishop Renison had decided to retire we felt that some of our life had come to an end. For always, subconsciously, we knew that Bob Renison is in the north, he is often in Toronto for meetings, his articles come out every week, he finds his way to T.C.S. and speaks in his inimitable fashion to the boys, he goes all over the north country, all over Canada, there is a man for you, his life packed full of adventures for his God and of deeds for his fellowmen, strong and vigorous in his leadership of an immense, young, growing part of Canada, filling his day more full in his seventies than most men in their liftiesf' His career has been outlined before, ofteng life in the Nipigon before the turn of the century, a missionary's son, T.C.S. Head Boy and winner of snow shoe races, first class honours at the University of Toronto, Theology at Wycliffe, missionary at Moose Fort and Albany, Archdeacon of Moo- sonee, trekking on snow shoes from James Bay to Cochrane, 186 miles, navigating the great rivers flowing into James Bay and Hudson Bay, Rector of Churches in Hamilton and



Page 19 text:

TRINITY COLLEGE SCHOOL RECORD 7 in Algoma. The future archbishop was given a sound and effective education, and his own first charge as a clergyman himself was in the very James Bay area to which he re- turned in the full flight of his later career, in 1943. He worked there for nearly fourteen years, and during that time won his mastery of the Cree and Ojibway languages. He translated hymns and other writings for the Indians, and learned to understand their mind and their way of life. He has always spoken respectfully and affectionately of our Indian fellow-citizens. A broader opportunity came to him in 1912, when he was appointed rector of the Church of the Ascension in Hamilton, where he was to stay for the next fifteen years. During the war, he spent a period overseas as chaplain of a Kingston regiment, but returned to his work in Hamilton when hostilities ceased. In 1927, the challenge of a church in Vancouver was placed before him. He was not long making his mark on that community, and two years later, was appointed Dean of New Westminster. A short time later, he became Bishop of Athabaska, and again the North seemed to beckon. But there was still a challenge in the city, and he came to St. Paul's, Toronto, one of the great churches of his denomination, in 1932. To most Toronto people, during the ensuing eleven years, the powerful ministry of the then Bishop Renison was the mounting apex of a magnificent career. The multitude of talents at the command of this gifted man were placed wholly in the service of his Master and his influence for good was an ever-spreading beneficence. Then, seemingly at the height of success, at the age of sixty-eight, the urge came to go back to the North, and he answered it with a whole heart, as always. His life's unreserved service to his church was recognized two years ago by his election as Archbishop and Metropolitan. Now, after more than ten years in the North, he has yielded the torch to other con- secrated hands, secure in the knowledge that his own service was fulfilled. Such a recital of the bare facts of a man's career does not explain the man, although they tend to illustrate the quality of mind and spirit which he must have possessed to have achieved so much. Those who have followed Arch- bishop Renison's weekly articles in The Globe and Mail for nearly eighteen years, do not need to be told of the mar- vellous eloquence of his language, the breadth of his sym-

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