Senator O'Connor College School

Senator O'Connor College School
Location
60 Rowena Drive

, ,
Canada
Coordinates43°45′02″N 79°19′02″W / 43.750677°N 79.317303°W / 43.750677; -79.317303
Information
Former nameJohn J. Lynch High School (1963–1967)
School typeCatholic, High school
MottoAudax et Fidelis
(Courageous and Faithful)
Religious affiliationsRoman Catholic
(Brothers of the Christian Schools and Daughters of Wisdom)
Founded1963
School boardToronto Catholic District School Board
SuperintendentCristina Fernandes
Area 6
Area trusteeAngela Kennedy
Ward 11
School number505 / 763772
PrincipalAnyta Kyriakou
Grades9-12
Enrolment1280 (2022-2023)
LanguageEnglish
AreaNorth York, Ontario
ColoursBlue and Gold   
Team nameO'Connor Blues
Feeder schoolsSee below
ParishAnnunciation
Specialist High Skills MajorBusiness
Sports
Program FocusAdvanced Placement
Extended French
French Immersion
Gifted
Websitewww.tcdsb.org/o/senatoroconnor

Senator O'Connor College School (also called SOCS, Senator O'Connor CS, Senator O'Connor, OCS, or simply Senator or O'Connor), previously known as John J. Lynch High School until 1967 is a Separate high school in the Parkwoods neighbourhood in the North York district of Toronto, Ontario, Canada serving grades 9 to 12 in the communities of Wexford, Maryvale, Don Mills, and Dorset Park.

The school was named after Senator Frank O'Connor, founder of the Laura Secord chocolate company. The school is part of the Toronto Catholic District School Board[1] and was originally founded as John J. Lynch High School in 1963, named after the first archbishop of Toronto from 1870 to 1888, John Joseph Lynch. It had 1,414 students as of March 2018,[2] and was ranked 266 of 738 secondary schools in the 2017-18 Fraser Institute School Report Card.[3]

History

The story

Frank Patrick O'Connor was a Canadian politician, businessman, philanthropist. He was the founder of Laura Secord Chocolates and Fanny Farmer, and the namesake behind O'Connor Drive in Toronto. He is the son of Mary Eleanor McKeown and Patrick O'Connor, O'Connor quit school at the age of 14 and started working at Canadian General Electric in Peterborough. He married Mary Ellen Hayes and moved with her to Toronto in 1912. He opened the Laura Secord Candy Store on Yonge Street in 1913 as he expanded the store across Canada and into the United States where it was known as Fanny Farmer Candy Stores.[4]

As a Roman Catholic, he gave $500,000 in the 1930s to the Archdiocese of Toronto under the trusteeship of Cardinal James Charles McGuigan.[4] O'Connor was appointed to the Senate of Canada in 1935 by Liberal Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King. He represented the senatorial division of Scarborough Junction, Ontario until his death in 1939.[5] O'Connor survived his wife, who died in 1931, and died at this estate at age 54.[4]

The school history

Prior to the founding of Senator O'Connor College School, several high schools were established around that area after the openings of Winston Churchill Collegiate Institute in Scarborough (1954), Don Mills Collegiate Institute (1957) and nearby Victoria Park Collegiate Institute (1960). In the meantime, several catholic separate schools within the Metropolitan Separate School Board (MSSB, renamed later to the Toronto Catholic District School Board) were opened such as Precious Blood Separate School in 1953 and Annunciation Separate School in 1965.

Senator O'Connor College School was founded by the Brothers of the Christian Schools and the Daughters of Wisdom in 1963 as John J. Lynch High School, becoming the first co-educational Catholic school in the Toronto archdiocese. In 1965, the second school building designed in an hexagon by Fisher Tedman Architects was erected, given the name Senator O’Connor College School with Brother Denis F.S.C. as its inaugurating principal. Starting in the 1967–68 school year, the "Senator O'Connor" name became the name for the whole school combining the Lynch and O'Connor buildings while the ninth and tenth grades were placed by the MSSB while grades 11–13 continued to be taught by their religious orders. The high school was built on land given to them by Senator Frank Patrick O'Connor, a Catholic philanthropist and founder of Laura Secord Chocolates, a Canadian chocolatier and ice cream company.

Senator O'Connor's House and Garage, and another building, belonging to the Christian Brothers, still exist on campus, and the Christian Brothers still lived there as a Provincial Office up until 2002.

In the 1970s, the Christian Brothers were an active part of school life, teaching classes, holding positions in the school administration and assisting with cafeteria monitoring. The administration of the school was turned over to lay teachers in 1973.

The school used to be split up into three main structures: the main O'Connor building, the JJ Lynch building, and a later addition of a complex of portables under one roof called the "Taj" or the "Taj Mahal". There was also another area with over a half dozen portables. There used to be an indoor swimming pool connected to the house, but it was torn down sometime in the late 1980s or early 90s. The Christian Brothers' house was located in the center of the campus, and so students would pass right in front of it or around it on all sides daily.

In 1984, when the Province of Ontario decided that Catholic secondary schools were to be fully funded, the school became publicly funded by 1987, and Senator O'Connor ceased being a private school. The school is fully operated by the MSSB. The last of the Christian Brothers staff to teach at O'Connor retired at the end of June 1990.

Originally the main high school was built to hold 732 students and by the 1990s the student population almost doubled that figure. Additions to the school such as the "Taj" were made over the course of the school's history. By 1995, talks of building a new school on the property began. That project was protested by local residents until its approval sometime in the early 2000s. In 2002, the Toronto Catholic District School Board acquired the O'Connor House from the Christian Brothers. The old Lynch, O'Connor and Taj Mahal buildings were demolished and a large new modern two-storey 1020-pupil high school which opened in September 2005 is now in place.[6][7]

Administration

Principals

Principal Previous School Date started Date finished Notes
Brother Denis 1963 1973 Founding Principal of JJ Lynch, boys section.
Mother Cyril 1963 1965 Founding Principal of JJ Lynch, girls section.
Brother George Edwards 1963 1965 Founding Principal of Senator O'Connor
Tom King 1973 1982 Transferred to St. John Henry Newman in 1982.
Patrick Gravelle 1982 1989
John Dean 1989 1991
Stan Kutz 1992 1997
John Dean 1997 2000 Second stint
Carmine Settino St. Joan of Arc 2001 2005 Currently Principal at Chaminade
Susan Baker 2005 2013 Spent most of years as English and phys ed teacher. Became principal of the newly built school in 2005, retired after 8 long years.[6] Also named one of Canada's Outstanding Principals by The Learning Partnership.[8]
Michael O'Keefe
(acting)
2009 2010 Served principal for a month
Paul McAlpine Francis Libermann
St. John Paul II
2013 2015
Tracey Parish Francis Libermann
St. Patrick
A.P.P.L.E.
2015 2019
Anyta Kyriakou Neil McNeil 2019 present Formerly served as vice principal at this school from 2016 to 2019.

Notable alumni

See also

References

  1. ^ "Senator O'Connor College School (763772)". School profile. Education Quality and Accountability Office. 2012. Retrieved 2012-12-10.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: deprecated archival service (link)
  2. ^ "Senator O'Connor College School (763772)". Secondary school profile. Ontario Ministry of Education. 2011-04-01. Retrieved 2012-12-10.
  3. ^ "Report Card for Senator O'Connor College School". School Report Cards. Fraser Institute. 2018. Archived from the original on August 16, 2019. Retrieved August 22, 2019.
  4. ^ a b c "Francis Patrick O'Connor - A Legacy of Generosity". Heritage Toronto. Archived from the original on May 30, 2009. Retrieved August 30, 2013.
  5. ^ "Parliament of Canada biography". Archived from the original on 2013-10-02. Retrieved 2013-08-30.
  6. ^ a b Queen, Lisa: Senator O’Connor ready to celebrate golden anniversary - InsideToronto.com, May 29, 2013, Retrieved August 9, 2013
  7. ^ Fire at historic O’Connor House in east end Archived 2025-01-19 at the Wayback Machine - CityNews.ca, May 9, 2012, Retrieved August 9, 2013
  8. ^ TCDSB Principal to be recognized by The Learning Partnership Archived 2013-11-13 at the Wayback Machine | Senator O'Connor - TCDSB.org