The first Anglican service in Banff took place in a log cabin on Bear Street in 1887 before holding worship in a tent on the site of the present-day church as it was being built. Clergy also led evening service at the Banff Springs Hotel. The chancel was complete by 1897[1] and the Bishop of Calgary, the Right Reverend William Pinkham, consecrated St George's in June 1920,[3] before the tower and spire were finished in 1926.[1]
In 2012, the church sought designation as a municipal historic resource and received approval on 30 July of the same year.[1][4] It was also included as a point of interest along the Commonwealth Walkway, which was opened on 17 September 2017.[5]
Features
George-in-the-Pines possesses 50 stained glass windows depicting local flora and fauna, as well as 11 bells by John Taylor & Co, which were shipped from Loughborough, England, to Banff via the Panama Canal.[1] They can be played by one person. St George-in-the-Pines was the first of only two churches in Canada to possess a set from that manufacturer.[2]
Whyte, John (1990), St. George's-in-the-Pines: The Anglican Church in Banff: a Centennial Celebration, Parish of St. George's-In-The-Pines, ASINB0037V96IQ