Owen Sound Collegiate and Vocational Institute

Owen Sound Collegiate and Vocational Institute (OSCVI), located in Owen Sound, Ontario, Canada, was one of the oldest schools in Canada having been founded in 1856 and in the late 1880s and early 1890s was the most academically successful school in Ontario.[1] The school also boasted a number of famous alumni.

Owen Sound Collegiate and Vocational Institute
Address
1550, 8th Street East

, ,
Canada
Coordinates44.56778°N 80.91681°W / 44.56778; -80.91681
Information
MottoDum Vivimus Vivamus
(While We Live, Let Us Live)
Established1856
Closed2016
School boardBluewater District School Board

History

Up until the 1850s Owen Sound had little in the way of formal education. At that time, the colonial government of Upper Canada had legislated the creation of grammar schools, which in essence were secondary schools, primary schools being known as common schools. In 1856 Grey County recognised the need for such a grammar school and the construction of a building to house both the grammar and common school was begun. Whilst this was being constructed on 10th Street West, ten students were taught in a leased building on 3rd Avenue East in 1856. The school dates its inception to that point. However, problems arose with the facility and new school was closed at the end of 1856 for a two-year period. In 1858 a new school building was erected on 4th Avenue East on a site now occupied by Strathcona School. This building housed the Owen Sound High School. In 1886 it was renamed the Owen Sound Collegiate Institute. Under this new guise from 1887 to 1892 the school placed first in the provincial department examinations.[2] Such was the school's academic achievement and dominance in this period that it has been described as one of a handful of outstanding collegiates in the 1880s and 1890s in Canada. In part its success was put down to civic pride and public investment in modern and uncommon facilities such as a science laboratory.[1] The building was expanded in 1907.

In 1924 a new vocational wing was built, and the school was renamed Owen Sound Collegiate and Vocational Institute (OSCVI). By 1951 the original building was in poor condition, and the third floor assembly hall had actually been condemned because of the fire hazard. The City Council had turned down three requests for space at Victoria Park to build a new school, and the issue finally went to a plebiscite in December 1951. The vote was overwhelmingly against building a new school on Victoria Park. Less than six months later the issue was dramatically decided when the older part of the school was destroyed by a spectacular blaze (May 1952). The vocational wing was repaired and the rest of the school was rebuilt on the same site, with a further addition completed in 1970. In 1997 construction began on a new site on 8th Street East, and this was opened in the autumn of 1999.[2] At the end of the 2015-2016 school year, in her 160th year and amid MUCH public outcry, OSCVI was amalgamated with West Hill Secondary School to form Owen Sound District Secondary School[3] while the physical building was converted into an elementary school.[4]

Over the years the school played host to many community events and activities. It was the main performance space for local amateur theatre troupe, the Owen Sound Little Theatre, and is still the main performance venue and rehearsal space for the Georgian Bay Symphony.

Alumni

A memorial plaque to Norman Bethune, installed at the school in 1980

See also

References

  1. Robert Douglas Gidney, Winnifred Phoebe Joyce Millar, Inventing secondary education: the rise of the high school in nineteenth-century Ontario, (McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP), 1990
  2. Paul White, Owen Sound: the port city, page 94, (Dundurn Press Ltd., 2000), ISBN 1-896219-23-3, ISBN 978-1-896219-23-3
  3. http://www.bayshorebroadcasting.ca/news_item.php?NewsID=87297
  4. Owen Sound Collegiate & Vocational Institute To Be Converted: BlackburnNews.com - Owen Sound Collegiate & Vocational Institute To Be Converted
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.