“1894: The frame church was too small for the congregation and it was decided to build a new brick church. The frame church was sold and moved. (This building, much changed, can still be seen as the Masonic Hall in Port Credit.) The new building was to use the building materials provided by the brick yard on the western edge on Port Credit. The stone foundation was provided by the “stonehookers”, who quarried building stone beneath the shallow waters off the shore of Lake Ontario. In the new building, the chancel rail from the Mississauga Indian church was placed. The new church could seat 350 people …. Tightly packed.”
Source: “Seasoned Just Right,” 1987, Skeoch