THESE seven years were years of 
      extraordinary growth in the country and in the city and, consequently, in 
      the mission and college work of the Church. This remarkable development is 
      clearly reflected in the annual reports of Manitoba College and of the 
      Manitoba Presbytery’s Home Mission Committee, and in the reports of the 
      College and of the Home Mission Committee of which he was Convener, the 
      hand of Robertson is very clearly seen, as is his influence apparent in 
      the directing and prosecuting of both these departments of Western work.
      At the first General Assembly of the 
      United Church in 1875, a reference from the last Assembly of the Canada 
      Presbyterian Church was brought forward by Mr. Robertson, asking 
      permission to raise thirty-five hundred dollars for the College. This 
      permission was granted and the money raised, with the result that in the 
      following year the College was reported to be in good condition. At that 
      General Assembly it was decreed that henceforth Manitoba College must 
      stand upon its own feet and must no longer be a charge upon the Home 
      Mission fund. The professors were reported as giving, with the two settled 
      pastors, very efficient service in the exploratory and other Home Mission 
      work of the Church. As we read the record of the lives of these men we are 
      amazed at the extent and variety of their labours. No man is allowed to 
      devote himself exclusively to his own special department. Every professor 
      is a home missionary taking his full share of the toil and dangers 
      inseparable from the work. Similarly, Robertson, besides his 
      congregational duties and that wider ministry in behalf of the incoming 
      settlers, began, in the year 1877, a course of lectures in Manitoba 
      College which he continued for a number of years. In this year, too, he 
      was made a member of the College board, and took his full share in the 
      administration of College affairs. He also took an important part in the 
      founding of the University of Manitoba and in bringing about the 
      affiliation of the College with that institution. This proved to be a 
      great uplift to Manitoba College, and at once the Presbyterian 
      constituency in the West began to take a new pride in their college and to 
      plan for its expansion. But the same year saw the terrible grasshopper 
      plague which swept the country bare, and so reduced the revenue that it 
      became necessary for the College to report a serious financial deficit. At 
      once there rose a cry for retrenchment, but to this Mr. Robertson would 
      not listen, and set about a vigorous campaign for further expansion which, 
      however, owing to circumstances over which he had no control, was only 
      partially successful.
But 
      though the College made heavy demands upon him, and though he gave himself 
      with all diligence to his multifarious congregational and other duties as 
      minister of Knox Church, it was the Home Mission work that, more than any 
      other, pressed hardest upon him during these years. It was characteristic 
      of him that at his first Presbytery meeting, before he himself was 
      inducted, he was found earnestly advocating a plan for the maintaining of 
      work in the Prince Albert district, vacated by the death of Mr. Nisbet.
      "When I wrote you last, I was 
      talking of going to Portage la Prairie to help to license and ordain Mr. 
      MeKellar to send him away to Prince Albert mission. As you will recollect, 
      Mr. Nisbet, who was our first missionary to that district, died a short 
      time ago. His wife was taken ill and he came down here with her. The five 
      hundred mile journey was too much for her and she died. He was reduced 
      very much owing to the fatigue incident to the journey, and through care 
      and anxiety in reference to his wife. Her death was too great a blow for 
      him and he followed her in about two weeks. The mission in the West was 
      thus left without a pastor. The Presbytery of Manitoba tried to get Mr. 
      Donaldson sent, but the Foreign Mission Committee objected. Things thus 
      indicated that the mission was to be without any supply during winter. On 
      my way here I heard that Dr. M— was going west, and to make Prince Albert 
      his headquarters for the winter. He is a dangerous man, and were he among 
      these simple-minded people for a winter doing all he could to wean them 
      away, I feared for the future of our mission." Needless to say, Dr. M— was 
      not a Presbyterian. "At the meeting of Presbytery I proposed to license 
      and ordain Mr. MeKellar if he would accept a call from our Presbytery. 
      Professor Bryce was instructed to communicate with him, the Presbytery 
      falling in with the suggestion made. The Presbytery agreed to adjourn to 
      meet in Portage la Prairie. Mr. McKellar accepted and we went west and all 
      things were arranged. We got all necessary outfit for him at the Portage, 
      and he holds himself in readiness to go west at once. There is a Mr. 
      McDonald down here just now from Fort Ellice, and I have made arrangements 
      with him to take him west with him and to put him on the other two hundred 
      and fifty miles as soon as possible. Dr. M— would go too with Mr. 
      McDonald, but he would not take him. I expect he will get west some way, 
      but McKellar will be before him and can counteract anything he may try to 
      do there. I am not sure how the Foreign Mission Committee will take the 
      matter, but cannot help it unless we were willing to endanger the 
      existence of our mission. We can, I think, justify our course."
      Without a doubt he can justify his 
      course in this instance and in many others to follow. Mr. Robertson is 
      keenly zealous for his Church. He heartily believes in it as a democratic 
      institution eminently suited to the needs of a new country and holding a 
      creed which, entering into the thought and feeling of a people, will do 
      much to establish it in righteousness. Hence, while being fair and 
      honourable with other denominations, he gives himself heart and soul to 
      the extension and consolidation of his own. And once having planted "the 
      blue banner" in any position of importance, he will not see it lowered 
      without a fight. He is out and out, and very frankly, a Presbyterian, and 
      by all honourable means he will maintain the Presbyterian cause where he 
      can. In a letter to his wife he writes:
      "I think I told you in my last 
      letter that Mr. Currie was to go west to Palestine. He has gone and is to 
      remain there all winter. Last week Mr. Black of Kildonan and myself were 
      at Headingly consulting about building another church and changing the 
      site. Matters progressed a good deal, and we expect to go up another day 
      and finish. I find that things of that kind are left to myself when sent 
      out. Mr. Black did nothing but sit and listen." Well he has earned the 
      right to sit and listen. Let the younger brother do battle. "We had three 
      hundred dollars subscribed on the spot and a grant of an acre for a new 
      church. We appointed two arbitrators to decide how much the old site and 
      the church are worth, and the man on whose land it is promises to take it 
      off our hands at that figure. Am going to suggest that they have a Tea 
      Meeting which may get one hundred dollars for them without much trouble."
      The habit is growing on Presbytery 
      unobserved, as is the case with all habits, of laying upon the minister of 
      Knox Church the burden of Home Mission work, not because he has any less 
      to do than others, nor simply because he is the minister of the leading 
      congregation in the West, and not solely because he is the Convener of the 
      Home Mission Committee, but because he is rapidly developing a genius for 
      administration, a capacity for swift, concentrated action, and, more than 
      all, he has burning in his heart a kind of passion of responsibility for 
      the incoming settlers belonging to his own Church and for the future of 
      the country they are helping to build.
      About this time we catch the first 
      notes, low and still distant, of those contending cries on the one hand of 
      appeal from the vigorous and growing child in the West and, on the other, 
      of warning protest from the nurturing mother in the East. It was in this 
      year, too, that Robertson began his long series of railroad missions. In 
      one of his missionary journeys a hundred miles east of Winnipeg, he 
      discovered a thousand men working within twenty miles of the line, with no 
      opportunity for religious privileges of any kind, He held a meeting with 
      them got promises from the men for seventy dollars a month for the support 
      of a missionary, board and lodging promised by the contractor, and thus 
      established his first railway mission. This mission in the year following 
      contributed nine hundred dollars towards the work, and called for a second 
      man.
      The Home Mission operations of 1878, 
      as reported to the Assembly, were shown to extend from Rat Portage for 
      seven hundred and fifty miles west, and from the boundary line to 
      Battleford, two hundred and seventy-five miles north. Over this territory 
      forty-four mission fields have been carried on and many more were reported 
      as waiting to be opened up, the liberality of the settlers being 
      abundantly attested by their Voluntarily contributing out of their scanty 
      means almost ten thousand dollars.
      And now with each succeeding report 
      from the Presbytery of Manitoba, we begin to get visions of new fields 
      ever opening up on the horizon of unclaimed territory far beyond where, 
      Mr. Robertson addressing the Church, says, "your children are making for 
      themselves homes and are in danger of being neglected and forgotten." We 
      begin to hear now those tales of heroic endurance on the part of the 
      prairie missionary with which in later days we are to become so familiar; 
      of his long journeys from five to fifty miles on a Sabbath day, of his 
      facing the perils of frosts and blizzards and of his cheerful courage 
      through it all.
      When the Home Mission report for the 
      Manitoba Presbytery for 1880 was presented, the General Assembly for the 
      first time seemed to become aware of what had been happening during the 
      past ten years. The Presbytery’s western limit of the previous year had 
      been pushed back some three hundred and fifty miles by the demand of 
      far-off Edmonton for a missionary. In the report for this year occur the 
      noble words breathing high statesmanship and high devotion: "Presbytery 
      realizes that the first missionary who appears in any field obtains most 
      important hold. Presbytery regards it as wise and most honouring to 
      Christ, that so soon as any considerable number of people are settled 
      together, the pioneer Presbyterian missionary should visit them and 
      collect the people at central points for prayer and praise in the open, or 
      in a log dwelling of some godly settler. As soon as any region is fairly 
      settled the Presbytery aims to send a resident missionary. The missionary 
      on an average can overtake fifty or sixty families scattered among four or 
      five stations."
      The Assembly awakens to the fact 
      that the work in the West must henceforth be taken very seriously. The 
      Manitoba Presbytery this year spends nine thousand four hundred dollars in 
      their Home Mission field, and still the call is for more men and more 
      money. The following year, 1881, the crisis is reached. It is a year of 
      great material progress throughout the whole West. The Presbytery has 
      increased its staff of workers by fourteen, employing in all twenty-one 
      ordained missionaries and fifteen catechists. A thousand miles beyond 
      Winnipeg the field has been occupied, but on every side, from southern 
      Manitoba, from the west and from the northwest, still rises the cry for 
      workers. To the Presbytery the situation appears desperate. Never in the 
      history of the Church has a Presbytery been entrusted with so vast a 
      field, and with such enormous responsibilities. With everything that they 
      have been able to achieve in the way of supplying settlements, the 
      Presbytery is painfully conscious of much work lying undone and many 
      districts lying neglected. Professors, pastors, missionaries and 
      catechists are all working to the limit of their powers, and yet whole 
      sections of the country are unorganized and unexplored. The Presbytery 
      determines upon a bold step. The extraordinary need must be met by 
      extraordinary means. After much deliberation an overture is prepared and 
      sent forward to General Assembly, praying for the appointment of a 
      Superintendent of Missions over the field occupied by the Presbytery. 
      Anent the overture, the veteran pioneer missionary from the West, Dr. 
      Black, is invited to address the Assembly. In a speech of remarkable 
      force, lacking though he is in physical vigour, Dr. Black supports the 
      overture.
      The prayer is granted. A committee 
      consisting of Dr. Waters, Convener, Dr. Cochrane, Messrs. Pitblado, King, 
      Macdonnell, Black, Warden, ministers, and Messrs. Laurie, Vidal, McMicken, 
      Munns, elders, was appointed. The committee recommend that James 
      Robertson, presently pastor of Knox Church, Winnipeg, be appointed 
      Superintendent of Missions in the Northwest, his salary to be two thousand 
      dollars, this to cover all expenses while he may be labouring in Manitoba 
      or the immediate neighbourhood. Journeys to distant points such as 
      Edmonton to be paid by the Assembly’s Home Mission Committee.
      The appointment of Assembly is 
      telegraphed to Mr. Robertson where, toiling at his work alone, for his 
      wife and family are in the East, he finds himself summoned to make one of 
      the most momentous decisions of his life.