130 



COXGKEGATIOXALISTS. 



9; Madagascar, 1). Ckrtk*, 8,609 (England, 

 1.180; Wales, 700; Scotland, 101; Ireland, 

 87; inland* of the British Seas, 17; Canada 

 and ItritUh North America, 107; Australia, 

 145; New Zealand, 16; Si.-ith Africa and 

 iMiiernra, 17: mission churches.800). Pat- 

 ton, 2,718 (England, 1,631; Wide-. 830; 

 Scotland, 86; Ireland, 31; Continent, 6; 

 Colonies, 488; heathen land*, 165; natives, 

 Colttye* and inttituttt, 29 (England. 12 ; 

 Wales, 8; Scotland, 1; Colonies, 8; foreign 

 lands, 10). Students in eolUaei, 667. 



1 ho following are the statistics of the Con- 

 gregational churches in the United States and 

 North America, as given in the Congregational 

 Quarterly for January, 1874: 



tiam 17. 



California.. 



n -I-.. 



GoorgU. 



IcUho.... 



I .:. :- 

 In.lUn* 



of Colombia. 



Krnlorkir. 



I. ..-..: . 

 M, 

 M.n Uti . 



Nehrvlu. 

 MrmU .......... 



\ ii u Ml In 



.. 

 North CuotUu . 



v 



VlnrlnU. 

 Wwhlnrton Territorjr.. 

 KT..I Vfrslnta 7. 



Total In Hi- Vnliwl State*. 



Ontario and Ourbec 



Xw rlnmnrlck 



ToUl ! North Amoric.. 



5 

 7 

 10 

 8 



S4S 



M 



*1T 



i n 



i 

 10 



M 



50T 

 M 

 81 



OH 



i 



M 



6 

 111 



73 

 4 



U 



184 

 1 



a 

 10 



8 



T 



4 



SM 



15 

 7 



3 



18 



M 



84 



C 



1* 



189 



1 



836 



Mi 



TS 



5 



48 



ra 



M 



M 

 4 



171 

 



3 



10 



m 

 s 

 s 

 1 



IBS 



S.4S1 JI.SJ7 



,7TO 



an 



49.758 

 189 



n 

 m 



10 



n,en 



l.*40 



t*,tn 



S93 



n 



19.214 

 110 



Kl.li'4 

 IM47 



130 



Utt 



-7. in 



1S6 



IT JO 



485 



S.S51 



4 'llil 

 VI.P 



501 



no 



49 



SI 



SI 



779 



IN 



S30.1SO 



The foreign missionariea, 116 in number, 

 beside* three miMionaries in Jamaica, are not 

 iaoloded in this table. The nmnl.rr of lie. -n- 

 tUtes falno not included in the table) i- 



iu churches In tli>- I'int. .1 States, 666 are 

 without jHUtoral snpj.l.v ; in North Aimrk.i. 

 676. Of the ministon, 898 in lh. I i.ii.-.l 

 State*, V55 in North Anu>rirn, are ji:istur-< nf 

 rhurchc*; 1.806 in tho Tnitixl State*, 1,1" I in 



Ii A morion, are "net inn jinstorn ;" while 

 044 in tli- I nited States, 068 in North AIIICT- 

 ice, are not in pastoral work. 



The Congregational Union of Ontario and 

 Quebec, which lu-l<l its annual nit-etini; in 1873 

 at Hrantford, rt-]'ortcd. in 1871, 86 cluirclieN 

 61 pastors, and 18 ministers without pastoral 

 charge. Seventy-four of the churchc* ri]n.rt- 

 ed 136 regular stations, 14,206 hearers, 6.062 

 members, 686 Sunday-school teachers, 6,638 

 Sunday-school scholars, 623 in the pastors' 

 Hible-classes, 81 i-huroh-lniildinps, with 20,753 

 Mitinp*; 16 parsonages, toother valued at 

 |286,852; contributions to rdirimis ol i 

 $70,447. There is another Cougrvgiitidiiul 

 Union for Nova Scotia and New BrmiMviik, 

 which lias Ii ministers in No\a Scotia, 4 in 

 New Brunswick, and 1 in Newfoundland. The 

 membership of the churches in Nova Scotia 

 was 1,085. The "Canada Ocamgattoul Mis- 

 sionary Society" has for its object to aid fee- 

 ble Congregational churches in sustaining their 

 ministers, to spread the Gospel by means of 

 missionaries among all classes of inhabit 

 and to promote other general missionary ob- 

 jects of the Congregational body. It is in 

 connection with the ''Colonial Missionary 

 Society " of England, and received in the 

 year 1871-73, from the churches of Canada, 

 $4,136 ; from the Colonial Missionary 8oci< tv, 

 $2,422; and expended v7.H 4. '1 he'" Canada 

 Congregational Indian Missionary Su.ut\'' 

 was established at Owen Sound in I860. It 

 employs three missionaries at three (kids of 

 labor, and receives many calls for more la- 

 boren. 



In the Australian colonies there arc Con- 

 gregational t'nions in Victoria, New South 

 Wales, South Australia, Queensland, 'VWtiin 

 Australia, Tasmania, and New Zealand. Tbei i- 

 are Congregational colleges at Melbourne and 

 Sydney. In New South Wales, the Congrc- 

 gationalists, according to the census of 1871, 

 occupied 19 churches, 11 of which were in the- 

 city of Sydney or its suburbs: the ministers 

 numbered 25; there was accommodation for 

 7,680 persons, and an average attendance of 

 4,950. The total population in connection 

 with the Congregational churches was 9,253, 

 or 1.8 per cent, of the total population. In 

 Victoria, the ( 'migrefrationalists had <!3 chapels, 

 20 school-houses, and 12 dwellings or public, 

 buildings used for public worship, with fittings 

 for 15.860 persons, and an average attendance- 

 of 8,974. The population connected with the 

 Congregational churches was 18.191. In South 

 Australia the Congrcgationalists have 29 ohap- 

 els and 14 temporary places of worship, and 

 28 ministers. There is accommodation for 

 s.fio.i. The Congregational population in 

 Wi-tcrn Australia, according to the census of 

 1*71, ru NVJ. The Congregationalirts of 

 Tasmania have 11 ministers, 54 chapels, anil 

 4,500 attendants, and 84 Sabbath-school*, with 

 aeher* and 2,050 scholars The Con- 

 gregational population was 8,931. In Qm 

 land there were 12 Congregational churches 

 and 11 preaching-places. In New Zealand 

 there were 15 churches. 



