Neil McNeil Catholic High School | |
Address: | 127 Victoria Park Avenue |
City: | Toronto |
Province: | Ontario |
Postcode: | M4E 3S2 |
Country: | Canada |
Coordinates: | 43.679°N -79.2827°W |
Schooltype: | Catholic High school |
Motto: | Fidelitas in Arduis |
Motto Translation: | Faith in Hard Times |
Religious Affiliation: | Roman Catholic |
Founded: | 1958 |
Schoolboard: | Toronto Catholic District School Board |
Superintendent: | Ryan Peterson |
Trustee: | Nancy Crawford |
Number: | 502 / 734080 |
Principal: | Sandra Mudryj |
Sister School: | Notre Dame |
Grades Label: | Grades |
Grades: | 9-12 |
Enrolment: | 826 |
Enrolment As Of: | 2017-18 |
Language: | English |
Colours: | Maroon and Gray |
Team Name: | Neil Maroons |
Free Label1: | Parish |
Free Text1: | St. John |
Free Label2: | Specialist High Skills Major |
Free Text2: | Construction Health and Wellness Information and Communications Technology |
Free Label3: | Program Focus |
Free Text3: | Broad-based Technology Gifted AdvancedPlacement Student Leadership Athletics |
Neil McNeil Catholic High School is an all-boys Roman Catholic secondary school in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is named after Neil McNeil, the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Vancouver from 1910 to 1912 and Roman Catholic Archbishop of Toronto from 1912 to 1934. It is administered by the Toronto Catholic District School Board (TCDSB), formerly the Metropolitan Separate School Board.
Neil McNeil is one of 31 high schools run by the TCDSB and one of four all-boys schools, and currently has an enrolment of 826 students. The school offers a Broad-based technology centre, cooperative education program and one of the largest visual arts studios in the city.
This school is a sister school to Notre Dame High School.
In 1954, six Holy Ghost Fathers came from Ireland. Their original purpose was to get missionaries as Archbishop James Charles McGuigan wanted an all-boys school in east Toronto and the first high school in Scarborough that was founded in 1958 by the Holy Ghost Fathers. The school was named after Neil McNeil, Archbishop of Toronto from 1912 to 1934. During his entire term as Archbishop, he fought tirelessly for the extension of funding for Catholic secondary schools. He demonstrated in both words and deeds the school motto “Fidelitas in Arduis”, which translates to “Faith In Hard Times”.
From its inception, priests came out to teach. The first principal was Father Troy until his retirement in 1965. At first the school was a two-story building with no gym and no cafeteria. In 1960, the third floor and gymnatorium as well as the cafeteria were added.
In 1967, the school entered an agreement with the Metropolitan Separate School Board (now the Toronto Catholic District School Board, where, by Grade 9 and 10, students would be under the publicly funded separate school system and Grades 11, 12, and 13 would continue as a private school. Since 1987, the school was fully funded by government and Neil McNeil was ceased as a private school. The school was maintained and operated fully by the MSSB although the Spiritans continue to lease the school.
Even though the last priest-principal of the school retired in 1990, the Spiritan presence is alive and well through the Spiritan Scholarship Fund established in 1995. By 1998, the fund disbursed more than $50,000 in scholarship awards for students going to university or community college.
Notre Dame is the "Sister School" of Neil McNeil Catholic Secondary School located not far from Neil McNeil. Both of these schools are regarded as among the oldest and most discriminative high schools in the TCDSB and in the city of Toronto. It is a school renowned for its elaborate and spirited school assemblies and tight knit community. Neil McNeil's patron saint is the Holy Spirit.
The Toronto Catholic District School Board acquired Neil McNeil's school facilities from the Spiritans' in 2009.[1]
Neil McNeil was one of five schools in the Toronto Catholic District School Board that underwent a school accommodation review in June 2009 for possible consolidation, relocation or closure, either having too many or too few students. In December, the board decided to close two schools and relocate another.[2]
The school's parent council co-chair Nicole Waldron said the group was opposed to one of the three options presented by the board for students from Neil to be relocated from Victoria Park and Kingston Road near the Scarborough Bluffs to St. Patrick (on the former Lakeview Secondary School grounds) in the Greenwood and Danforth Avenues area. He stated that “We are here tonight to say that the history of closing schools must end in this process. We are not here to close and to relocate Neil McNeil,” Waldron told a boisterous crowd of about 400 people at a public meeting on January 7 at Neil. The review of the east-end schools came into light because there are too many students at Cardinal Newman, Neil McNeil, Notre Dame and Jean Vanier and too few students at St. Patrick. However, both the sites of Jean Vanier and St. Patrick are currently owned by the Toronto District School Board via the Toronto Lands Corporation (TLC) realtor arm if returned while the Newman property and land is owned by St. Augustine's Seminary.[3]
In this particular grouping, the TCDSB explored three main options:[4]
Since the issue came to light in fall of 2009, local stakeholders have passionately expressed their desire to go with the third option of investing in bettering St. Patrick. Some of the possibilities could include refocusing the school into a centre for the arts, implementing a kindergarten to Grade 12 (K-12) French immersion program or even offering year-round school for students there from K-12.
The end result was St. Patrick became the Centre for the Arts, Media, and Technology in June 2010.[6] Since then, the school board agreed with the Spiritans to make every effort possible to maintain the Neil facility for the next 50 years. That agreement is a clause in the June 2009 purchase agreement between the TCDSB and the Spiritan order.
Every Friday morning, the school song is sung, replacing the singing of O Canada on other weekdays.
School spirit and student life is fostered by the elected Student Council. Since the 2011-2012 academic year, Student Council has had autonomy over their affairs, reporting directly to the Principal. This has allowed Council to make quick decisions.