Skip Navigation
Mount Pleasant Group logo
  • Home page navigation iconHome
  • Info iconAbout Us
  • News iconCondolences & Services
  • Find A Grave search tool iconFind A Grave
  • Contact iconContact
  • About Us

    About usOur purpose, vision and values, governance, by-laws, etc.

  • Find a Funeral

    Find a FuneralCondolences & Services

  • Immediate Help

    Immediate HelpA Death Has Occurred

  • Direct Cremation

    Simple CremationCremation - No ceremony or services

  • Locations

    LocationsCemeteries & funeral centres

  • Plan Ahead

    Plan AheadPreparing for the future

  • Products

    ProductsExplore your options

  • News and Events

    News and EventsItems of interest

  • FAQs

    FAQsAnswers to your questions

  • Price Lists

    Price ListsCurrent cemetery and funeral prices

  • Multilingual services

    Multilingual InformationFor a diverse GTA

  • Cemetery Application

    Cemetery AppSearch for grave locations, historical people & our arboretum

  • Resources

    ResourcesBy-laws, support, brochures, maps and more

  1. Home
  2. Our Monthly Story
  3. Story Archives
  4. Pine Hills Cemetery
  5. RLong

Robert Charles Long

Section 10, Lot 1449
Pine Hills Cemetery

Born in Toronto, Charles Long attended Scarborough Collegiate Institute (R. H. King Collegiate Institute), and then went on to study in theology at the Toronto Bible College in 1947. Graduating in 1950, Long then spent a year as a missionary pastor for the Shantymen Christian Association, a mission outreach program for people working in remote locations across northern Canada. In 1951, he joined the Africa Evangelical Fellowship and was sent to Nyasaland, now Malawi, in south-eastern Africa. He met and married his wife there, and they continued their mission work in Africa until 1962. For the next 16 years, Reverend Long served various communities across Ontario, until forced to resign due to declining health while serving in London in 1978. He moved to Toronto where he was Bible teacher at Dorset Park Baptist Church. Having become interested in birds as a child, while still in high school long wrote a regular column on ornithology for a local newspaper. His growing expertise led to an association with the ornithology department of the Royal Ontario Museum (ROM). While in Africa, Long built up an extensive collection of African birds, parts of which he later donated to the Zimbabwe Museum, the British Museum, and ROM. He accepted a post as a museum research associate in 1965. Following a lengthy illness, Revered Long died at his home on April 1, 1986. He was 58 years old.

 Story Archives »

Copyright 2025 © Mount Pleasant Group

  • Seasonal Recall
  • Privacy Policy
  • Accessibility
  • Sitemap
  • Instagram Icon
  • Facebook link
  • Linked Icon
  • Twitter Icon
  • YouTube Icon
  • accessibility logo
  • BAO Consumer Information Guide