General Vanier Public School (Ottawa)

Opened for the 1963-64 school year, General Vanier Public School serves Ottawa's Riverside Park East and South communities. The school was completed in 1963 on what had been the Munro farm. The school accommodated students from kindergarten through grade 6. Grades 7 and 8 were transported by bus from the school to Hopewell Avenue School.[1]

General Vanier Public School
Repaving the General Vanier PS schoolyard
Address
1025 Harkness Avenue

, ,
Canada
Coordinates45.367644°N 75.674716°W / 45.367644; -75.674716
Information
Motto"Together, in a positive, secure environment, the General Vanier School Community fosters the development of respectful, caring, responsible, interdependent, self-directed learners."
Established1963
OpenedAugust 1963
School boardOttawa-Carleton District School Board
SuperintendentNadia Towaij
Area trusteeShirley Seward
PrincipalTammy McCormack
GradesJ-K to Grade 3
Communities servedRiverside Park East
Websitewww.generalvanierps.ocdsb.ca

At the time of the opening in the fall of 1963, Bayview Public School on Riverside Drive was undergoing renovations. Students temporarily attended General Vanier PS.[1]

The school adjoins Pauline Vanier Park, named after the Governor-General's wife.

Naming the School

Georges and Pauline Vanier in 1940

The Ottawa public board, which had begun naming schools after vice-regal representatives, sought and obtained the permission of Governor-General Georges Vanier to name the school after him. It had already named schools after Governors-General Vincent Massey and Viscount Alexander.[2]

Visitors and Events

The Governor-General and Mrs Vanier attended the official opening of the school on 21 November 1963. On that occasion he unveiled a plaque commemorating the event, which is displayed at the entrance of the building.[3] The visit was lighthearted, including a lesson for the children by Mrs. Vanier on how to curtsey.[4]

In May 1964, Mrs. Vanier returned for another visit to the school. On this occasion she granted the students a special holiday, at the request of the Governor-General who had asked she do so for "those kids of mine".[5]

To celebrate the school's 50th anniversary, a time capsule was created by students with the assistance of School Board artist-in-residence Marc Walter, a mixed-media artist from Edelweiss, Quebec. All 177 students contributed to the capsule which was publicly unveiled May 23, 2014. It is intended to be reopened after 25 years.[6]

Notes

  1. "City of Ottawa Public School Board: School Boundary Changes". The Ottawa Citizen (268). 23 August 1963. p. 24.
  2. "New School to be Named for Vanier". The Ottawa Citizen. 3 May 1963. p. 4.
  3. "General Vanier Public School: Memorial 35060-005 Ottawa, ON". National Inventory of Canadian Military Memorials. Veterans Affairs Canada. Retrieved 30 December 2016.
  4. "It's not the twist (photo)". The Montreal Gazette. The Gazette Printing Company. Canadian Press. 25 November 1963. p. 35.
  5. "Playtime". The Ottawa Citizen (501). 28 May 1964. p. 1.
  6. McCracken, Erin (29 May 2014). "General Vanier time capsule to mark anniversary". Ottawa South News. Retrieved 6 August 2015.
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gollark: They arbitrarily hide the C:\ drive then complain when people find it via any of various methods.
gollark: The security cameras were accessible on the internal network with the default password, no?
gollark: Given the school's wonderful security practices, indeed.
gollark: No, also stuff like how networks work and how they can be exploited, cryptography, issues in webapps like SQL injection, what bugs foolish C users can introduce, sort of thing.
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