St. Margaret's Uniting Church, Hackett

St Margaret's Uniting Church is a Uniting church in Hackett, Australian Capital Territory, Australia.

St Margaret's Uniting Church
St Margaret's Uniting Church
35°14′51″S 149°09′18″E
LocationCorner Antill Street and Phillip Ave., Hackett, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory
CountryAustralia
DenominationUniting Church
ChurchmanshipProtestant
Websitestmargs.unitingchurch.org.au
History
StatusChurch
Founded1964 (1964)
DedicationSt Margaret of Scotland
Dedicated16 December 1967 (1967-12-16)
Architecture
Functional statusActive
Architectural typeChurch
Specifications
Number of spires1
Administration
PresbyteryCanberra Region
SynodNew South Wales and ACT
Clergy
Minister(s)Rev. Chris Lockley

The soaring spire of the church building it shares[1] with Holy Cross Anglican congregation is a major landmark in North Canberra, at the intersection of the four suburbs of Watson, Dickson, Downer and Hackett.[2]

40th anniversary celebration marking dedication of Holy Cross Anglican Church and St. Margaret's Uniting Church, Hackett.

History

St. Margaret's Uniting Church, together with Holy Cross Anglican Church, are the only remaining congregations from different denominations in the Australian Capital Territory to continue to share a church, hall and grounds, and on occasions ministers and even services.

The Church was founded in 1964[3] as a shared congregation of the Presbyterian and Methodist churches in the then newly built North Canberra suburbs of Watson, Dickson, Downer and Hackett.[4] In doing so it predated by over a decade the family of churches it now belongs to, the Uniting Church in Australia, which was formed in 1977 when the Congregational, Methodist and Presbyterian churches came together.[5]

Services were initially held in school rooms until the completion and official dedication of the church building on 16 December 1967.[6]

It faces the Australian Catholic University's Canberra Campus (Signadou), built in 1963 as the Dominican Sisters' Teacher Training College, across Antill Street.

The church is home to Meg's Toybox,[7][8] the major toy library for North Canberra, and the Stepping Stones for Life disability support organisation.[9]

Tradition

Worship at St Margaret's is in the liberal Protestant tradition of the Uniting Church in Australia.[10]

gollark: But deliberately hoarding vulnerabilities is an active threat to the security of everything.
gollark: I mean, not releasing your software is... your choice, it's your stuff, I might not really like it but I don't consider it particularly bees.
gollark: !quote 723983650043199568
gollark: If you have useful, popular tools you can probably get PRs for them, and it saves people working in the same field from just implementing their own versions.
gollark: Or, well, failing to improve its security and deliberately exploiting that?

References

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