St. Patrick High School (Thunder Bay)

St. Patrick High School is a Catholic high school located in the south end of Thunder Bay, Ontario. It is part of the Thunder Bay Catholic District School Board, and its amenities include a chapel, custom-built music rooms, newly renovated auditorium (as of 2010), two gyms, a fully functional cafeteria, and wheelchair accessibility. The schools offers courses in French immersion. Unlike schools in the public system, students at St. Patrick are required to wear uniforms. Its varsity team is the St. Patrick Saints.

St. Patrick High School
Address
621 South Selkirk Street

, ,
P7E 1T9

Canada
Coordinates48°22′30″N 89°15′36″W
Information
School typeHigh school
MottoFide Et Labore Valebo
(Through Faith and Hard Work I shall succeed)
School boardThunder Bay Catholic District School Board
PrincipalKevin Koster
Grades9-12
LanguageEnglish
Colour(s)Green and Gold         
MascotFighting saint (Saint)
RivalsHammarskjold High School
Westgate Collegiate & Vocational Institute
St. Ignatius High School
Websitetbcschools.ca/st-patrick



History

Fort William Vocational Colligate institute was constructed in 1931 and later changed its name to Selkirk Collegiate & Vocational Institute in 1957. In 1988 it was bought by the Thunder Bay Catholic District School Board to replace Sacred Heart High School, and its name changed to St. Patrick High School. It is currently located in the building formerly occupied by Selkirk High School of the Lakehead District School Board system.

Saint Patrick is one of the two high schools to have uniforms in Thunder Bay.

gollark: It *did* contain no nanobots, but obviously they moved around to enter your opening bracket and assemble μparantheses and APIONET nodes inside it.
gollark: Thus, none are safe from correct parentheticization.
gollark: Actually, that ) contained 1824718946187487124 GTech™ nanobots which construct μparantheses around nearby statements experiencing unbalanced brackets.
gollark: )
gollark: When have I been wrong? Do not list any instances of this, as they do not actually exist.

See also


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.