Calgary

Fire at oldest Protestant church in southern Alberta 'likely accidental,' say RCMP

Cochrane RCMP don't believe the fire that destroyed a historical church near Morley, Alta., on the weekend was set deliberately.

Church board caught off guard by RCMP news release, say they haven't been informed

The McDougall Stoney Mission Church, the oldest permanent Protestant church in southern Alberta, was destroyed by fire on May 22. (McDougall Stoney Mission Society/Matt Foudy)

Cochrane RCMP say the fire that destroyed a historical church near Morley, Alta., on the weekend was "likely accidental."

The McDougall Stoney Mission Church caught fire early Monday morning.

It was the oldest Protestant church in southern Alberta and was located west of Cochrane on Highway 1A.

"There is no evidence to suggest that the fire was deliberately set," said RCMP in a release, adding the investigation has been concluded.

The fire that gutted the historic church just east of Morley, Alta. was at first believed to be accidental. (Sarah Harvey/McDougall Stoney Mission Society )

Church officials, however, said Tuesday that assessment caught them off guard.

"The original firefighters who called our president yesterday said they suspected it was arson," said Sarah Harvey, a volunteer and board member with the McDougall Stoney Mission Society.

"Finding that statement from the RCMP today was shocking because it conflicted all of our beliefs. We're not fire investigators but you look at that scene and I don't know how something like that can be accidental."

Harvey said the board had not been contacted by RCMP on Tuesday and their insurance company is conducting its own investigation.

The investigator who worked on the case also says the fire department's investigation could last months, but the cause will probably come down to "inappropriate use of, or disposal of, an unknown ignition source" not arson.