Runnymede Collegiate Institute
Runnymede Collegiate Institute (colloquially known as Runnymede CI, RCI, or Runnymede) is a high school located on Jane Street in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The school first opened in 1927 and is operated by the Toronto District School Board. Prior to 1998, the school was part of the Board of Education for the City of York. Runnymede has a population of 500 students and has a variety of course offerings ranging from computer technology to co-operative education, from modern languages to music. The motto of this school is Vestigia Nulla Retrorsum ("No Steps Back").
Runnymede Collegiate Institute | |
---|---|
Address | |
569 Jane Street , , Canada | |
Coordinates | 43.663387°N 79.489501°W |
Information | |
School type | Public Secondary School |
Motto | Vestigia Nulla Retrorsum (No Steps Backward) |
Founded | 1927 |
School board | Toronto District School Board (Board of Education for the City of York) |
Superintendent | Sandy Spyropoulos LC4, Superintendent Tracy Hayhurst LN20 |
Area trustee | Robin Pilkey Ward 7 |
School number | 6776 / 939609 |
Principal | Paul Edwards |
Grades | 9-12 |
Enrollment | 510 (2019) |
Language | English |
Area | Runnymede |
Colour(s) | Red, White |
Slogan | Worth Discovering |
Mascot | The Raven |
Team name | Runnymede Ravens Runnymede Redmen(1927-1994) |
Website | schoolweb |
History
Runnymede Collegiate Institute was completed and officially opened on November 11, 1927, although classes had begun on September 6 for 250 students and a staff of 10 teachers led by Principal Bruce W. Clark. The original Collegiate Gothic building was designed by Charles Wellington Smith and consisted of eight classrooms, three science labs, an auditorium, a library, a gymnasium, a cafeteria and a locker area on three floors. Significant additions to the building were completed in 1928, 1958 and 1966. The building now includes over 30 classrooms, a swimming pool, two gyms, computers labs and a large cafeteria.
The school was built on land, which had belonged to John Scarlett. His is estate was called “Runnymede” after the field of Runnymede, where King John of England signed the Magna Carta. The school's colours, red and white, derive partly from Scarlett's name, and also from the fact that the school opened in the year of Canada's Diamond Jubilee. Owing to their red school jackets, Runnymede students came to be known as Redmen in the 1930s. Over time an Indian head logo was adopted to go with the name. The Redmen name and logo were retired in 1994.[1]
Runnymede Collegiate Institute celebrated its 90th anniversary on Saturday, May 6, 2017.[2] Hundreds of alumni, former teachers, and current students attended the reunion. There were "decade rooms" where former students from each decade would meet up with their classmates and teachers.
Clubs
Runnymede Collegiate Institute offers a number of different clubs and extracurricular activities. To join a club, students must pay an initial "activity fee" of $30 and $15 thereafter for each additional clubs they join. Some of the activities are listed below:[3]
- Badminton Club
- Baseball (boys and girls)
- Basketball (varsity, junior and senior)
- Black Students Association club
- Cheerleading
- Cross Country
- Dance Club
- Environmental Club
- FIRST Robotics Competition (Robotics) Team 1310
- Hockey (co-ed)
- International Club
- Leadership
- Math Club
- Me to We Club
- Mental Health and Wellness Club
- Power Yoga
- QSA Club
- Right to Play
- Soccer (junior and senior)
- Swim Team
- Tech Crew
- Track and Field
- Volleyball (Junior and senior girls, co-ed)
- Yearbook Club
The Robotics Team is the biggest club in Runnymede with over 60 students every year.[4]
Mountview Alternative School
Mountview Alternative School is a Kindergarten to Grade 8 school that shares space with Runnymede Collegiate Institute and Humbercrest Nursery School. The school was founded in 1983 in the Keele Street Public School building and has approximately 100 students.[5][6] Mountview was relocated to its present location at Runnymede Collegiate in 2018.
Notable alumni
- Frederick George Topham - recipient of the Victoria Cross in World War II
- Dwight Drummond - news anchor on CBC Toronto
- P. K. Subban - Defenceman, Nashville Predators
- Jim Peplinski - Captain of the Calgary Flames during their 1988-89 Stanley Cup Victory
- James Milton Ham, scientist and 10th President of the University of Toronto
- Claude Bissell, Canada's youngest university president
- Charlotte Sullivan, actress
- Dick Aldridge, Linebacker, Toronto Argonauts & Hamilton Tigercats
- Ted Woloshyn, CFRB Radio Host
- Howard Moscoe, city councillor [7]
- Gayle Christie, former York mayor [7]
See also
References
- Lalani, Azzura (19 January 2017). "GTA school boards to review Indigenous team names, mascots and logos". The Toronto Star. Retrieved 12 September 2017.
- "The Web site cannot be found". schoolweb.tdsb.on.ca.
- "The Web site cannot be found". schoolweb.tdsb.on.ca.
- "Runnymede Robotics". sites.google.com.
- https://schoolweb.tdsb.on.ca/mountviewalternative
- https://torontofamilyhistory.org/kingandcountry/tdsb/elementary-k-m
- Dec 01, 2016 Bloor West Villager, https://www.insidetoronto.com/news-story/6997819-runnymede-c-i-kicks-off-90th-anniversary-celebration-with-famous-alumni/
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Runnymede Collegiate Institute. |