Difference between revisions of "Sturgeon Creek Hutterite Colony (Headingly, Manitoba, Canada)"

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Sturgeon Creek Hutterite Bruderhof of the [[Schmiedeleut|Schmiedeleut]] branch, located four miles north of Headingly, [[Manitoba (Canada)|Manitoba]], was founded in 1938 by eleven families with 75 souls who left the [[Blumengart Hutterite Colony (Plum Coulee, Manitoba, Canada)|Blumengard Bruderhof]]with their preacher Samuel Kleinsasser, who was chosen a minister in 1933 and ordained in 1942. In 1954, when Sturgeon Creek had a population of 158 with 60 baptized members, a group of 13 families with 73 persons with the minister Jakob Kleinsasser (chosen in 1946 and ordained in 1954) left to found the Crystal Spring Bruderhof, 6 miles southeast of St. Agathe, Manitoba. In 1958 the Sturgeon Creek Bruderhof had 32 baptized members and a population of 98, with Samuel Kleinsasser and Elias Mandel (chosen in 1955) as preachers.
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Sturgeon Creek Hutterite Bruderhof of the [[Schmiedeleut|Schmiedeleut]] branch, located four miles north of Headingly, [[Manitoba (Canada)|Manitoba]], was founded in 1938 by eleven families with 75 souls who left the [[Blumengart Hutterite Colony (Plum Coulee, Manitoba, Canada)|Blumengard Bruderhof ]]with their preacher Samuel Kleinsasser, who was chosen a minister in 1933 and ordained in 1942. In 1954, when Sturgeon Creek had a population of 158 with 60 baptized members, a group of 13 families with 73 persons with the minister Jakob Kleinsasser (chosen in 1946 and ordained in 1954) left to found the Crystal Spring Bruderhof, 6 miles southeast of St. Agathe, Manitoba. In 1958 the Sturgeon Creek Bruderhof had 32 baptized members and a population of 98, with Samuel Kleinsasser and Elias Mandel (chosen in 1955) as preachers.
  
 
In 2012 the colony was a member of the [[Schmiedeleut|Schmiedeleut]] Group 2. The minister of the colony was David Maendel and the manager of the colony was Joey Maendel.
 
In 2012 the colony was a member of the [[Schmiedeleut|Schmiedeleut]] Group 2. The minister of the colony was David Maendel and the manager of the colony was Joey Maendel.

Revision as of 14:51, 23 August 2013

Sturgeon Creek Hutterite Bruderhof of the Schmiedeleut branch, located four miles north of Headingly, Manitoba, was founded in 1938 by eleven families with 75 souls who left the Blumengard Bruderhof with their preacher Samuel Kleinsasser, who was chosen a minister in 1933 and ordained in 1942. In 1954, when Sturgeon Creek had a population of 158 with 60 baptized members, a group of 13 families with 73 persons with the minister Jakob Kleinsasser (chosen in 1946 and ordained in 1954) left to found the Crystal Spring Bruderhof, 6 miles southeast of St. Agathe, Manitoba. In 1958 the Sturgeon Creek Bruderhof had 32 baptized members and a population of 98, with Samuel Kleinsasser and Elias Mandel (chosen in 1955) as preachers.

In 2012 the colony was a member of the Schmiedeleut Group 2. The minister of the colony was David Maendel and the manager of the colony was Joey Maendel.

Additional Information

Location: Headingly, Manitoba (coordinates: 49.9297222, -97.4230555 [49° 55′ 47″ N, 97° 25′ 23 W″])

Address: Box 285, Headingly, Manitoba R4J 1C1

Telephone: 204-633-2364


Author(s) David, Samuel Kleinsasser Decker
Bert Friesen
Date Published February 2013

Cite This Article

MLA style

Decker, David, Samuel Kleinsasser and Bert Friesen. "Sturgeon Creek Hutterite Colony (Headingly, Manitoba, Canada)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. February 2013. Web. 16 Apr 2024. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Sturgeon_Creek_Hutterite_Colony_(Headingly,_Manitoba,_Canada)&oldid=96629.

APA style

Decker, David, Samuel Kleinsasser and Bert Friesen. (February 2013). Sturgeon Creek Hutterite Colony (Headingly, Manitoba, Canada). Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 16 April 2024, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Sturgeon_Creek_Hutterite_Colony_(Headingly,_Manitoba,_Canada)&oldid=96629.




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Adapted by permission of Herald Press, Harrisonburg, Virginia, from Mennonite Encyclopedia, Vol. 4, p. 650. All rights reserved.


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