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Father Henry Carr Catholic Secondary School

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Father Henry Carr Catholic Secondary School (also referred to as Father Henry Carr , Henry Carr , FHC , FHCCSS , or Carr ) is a Catholic high school in Toronto , Ontario , Canada. It is administered by the Toronto Catholic District School Board , formerly the Metropolitan Separate School Board. It is named after a Basilian Father and founder of the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies , Henry Carr (1880–1963).

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18-790: The school was founded in 1974 by the Basilian Fathers and the MSSB as a semi-private school, though the current school building was originally opened in 1966 as Humbergrove Secondary School by the Etobicoke Board of Education when the board merged into the Toronto District School Board in which the school property is leased to the MSSB/TCDSB since 1988. The Humbergrove school was renamed to Marian Academy in 1988 and closed in 2002, though Carr occupied

36-611: A federated arts college. He was the co-founder of the Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies , and an advocate for the inclusion of religious education in curricular studies. Carr was born and raised in Oshawa , Ontario in 1880, one of nine children. He was ordained as a priest on September 3, 1905. He taught at St. Michael's College and acted as a president of the Institute of Mediaeval Studies until 1936 and served as

54-563: A playing field. Throughout the school's early existence, it operated as a private school for Grades 11 to 13 only while the MSSB educated grade 9 and 10 students. This changed in 1985 when the Government of Ontario passed Bill 30 to extend funding to Roman Catholic high schools beyond grade 10 and Carr was ceased to be a private school in 1987. However, in 1988, nearby Humbergrove Secondary School , built in 1966 on Martin Grove Road,

72-5239: Is a Toronto District School Board facility that operated as a public high school operated by the Etobicoke Board of Education from 1965 to 1988. As of 2019, the building remains under TDSB ownership. See also [ edit ] List of high schools in Ontario Marian Academy Father Henry Carr Catholic Secondary School References [ edit ] ^ "NON-OPERATING TDSB SCHOOL SITES" (PDF) . torontolandscorp.com . Retrieved 1 August 2016 . External links [ edit ] Humbergrove Secondary School v t e Secondary education in Toronto English-language public schools Toronto District SB A. Y. Jackson Agincourt Albert Campbell Alderwood † Avondale ASE 1 Bendale * Birchmount Park Bloor Bickford Park * Brockton * Burnhamthorpe C. W. Jefferys CALC (Parkview) Cedarbrae Central Etobicoke Central Technical Central Toronto City Contact Danforth David and Mary Thomson Delphi Don Mills Downsview Dr Norman Bethune Drewry Earl Haig East York EYASS Eastdale Emery Etobicoke ESA ( Royal York ) EYRAC Forest Hill Frank Oke George Harvey George S. Henry Georges Vanier Greenwood Harbord Heydon Park Humberside Humbergrove * Inglenook Jarvis John Polanyi Keiller Mackay † Kingsmill * Kipling L'Amoreaux Lakeshore ( New Toronto ) Lakeview * Lawrence Park Leaside Lester B. Pearson Lewis S. Beattie * Malvern Maplewood Marc Garneau Martingrove Midland * Monarch Park Nelson A. Boylen * Newtonbrook Native Learning Native Learning East North Albion North Toronto Northern Northview Heights Oakwood Oasis Parkdale Parkview R. H. King Richview Riverdale Rosedale Heights Runnymede Scarborough Centre Scarlett Heights * SEE SLE SEED Silverthorn Sir John A. Macdonald Sir Oliver Mowat Sir Robert L. Borden * Sir Wilfrid Laurier Sir William Osler South East Stephen Leacock Subway Academy I Subway Academy II Student School Tabor Park * Thistletown Timothy Eaton † Ursula Franklin Vaughan Road * Victoria Park Vincent Massey * W. A. Porter West Hill West Humber West Park * Western Weston Westview Wexford William Lyon Mackenzie Winston Churchill West End Woburn Yorkdale York Humber (Emmett) York Humber (Humber Blvd.)* York Memorial York Mills Toronto Catholic District SB A.P.P.L.E Bishop Allen Bishop Marrocco/Thomas Merton Brebeuf Brother Edmund Rice † Cardinal Carter Chaminade Dante Alighieri Don Bosco * Father Henry Carr ( Marian Academy ) Father Henry Carr (Kipling)† Father John Redmond Francis Libermann James Cardinal McGuigan Loretto Loretto Abbey Madonna Marshall McLuhan Mary Ward Michael Power/St. Joseph Monsignor Fraser Monsignor Percy Johnson Neil McNeil Notre Dame Regina Pacis * Senator O'Connor St. Basil-the-Great St. Joan of Arc St. John Henry Newman St. John Paul II St. Joseph's St. Joseph's Morrow Park St. Mary St. Michael's Choir St. Mother Teresa St. Oscar Romero St. Patrick French-language public schools CS Viamonde Étienne-Brûlé Le Collège français Toronto Ouest CS catholique MonAvenir Monseigneur-de-Charbonnel Père-Philippe-Lamarche Saint-Frère-André Private schools Non-religious A.R.S. Armenian Abelard Arrowsmith Bayview Glen Beach * Bond Branksome Hall Brighton Crescent Crestwood Dragon * Greenwood Halton Hudson Linden Lycée Français Metropolitan Nile Toronto French Toronto Prep UTS Upper Canada WillowWood York Religious Bialik Hebrew Bishop Strachan Bnei Akiva Crawford Adventist De La Salle Havergal Hawthorn Mariyah Islamic Netivot HaTorah North Toronto Christian Royal St. George's St. Clement's St. Michael's Tanenbaum Community Hebrew Tiferes Bais Yaakov Whitefield Christian Miscellaneous Lists List of secondary schools in

90-465: Is a mixed residential/commercial neighbourhood with an industrial park, a Catholic elementary school (St. Dorothy), a hospital (Etobicoke General), a community college (Humber College), a park (Masseygrove), a mall (Shopper's World Albion), a public secondary school ( West Humber Collegiate Institute ), and two public elementary schools (Elmbanks Junior Middle Academy and Melody Village Junior School). The school offers an Advanced Placement (AP) program. It

108-551: Is different from Wikidata Infobox mapframe without OSM relation ID on Wikidata Coordinates on Wikidata Pages using the Kartographer extension Ontario Federation of School Athletic Associations The Ontario Federation of School Athletic Associations (OFSAA) is an organization of student-athletes, teacher-coaches, student-coaches, teachers, principals, and sport administrators in Ontario , Canada. OFSAA

126-659: Is known for its boys' basketball program, being one of the highest ranked and consistently competitive teams in Toronto, as a member of the Toronto District Colleges Athletic Association (TDCAA), Ontario Scholastic Basketball Association (OSBA) and Ontario Federation of School Athletic Associations (OFSAA). The FHC Crusaders founded the prep program in 2015-16, the same year they captured the OFSAA "AAA" title. Throughout its existence,

144-610: Is the regional centre for the AP and Pre-AP program for the TCDSB. Extra-curricular activities include dramatic productions, art exhibits, drum-line and musical performances. Other programs are FHC has the Field of Dreams, a football and track field with artificial turf field. It offers sports such as basketball, hockey (not since 2005), football, softball, cricket, track and field, volleyball, badminton, cross-country, and swimming. The school

162-878: Is the second largest high school athletic association in North America, second only to the California Interscholastic Federation . Approximately 270,000 students and 16,000 teacher-coaches participate in school sport in Ontario. Every individual who is involved in school sport is a member of OFSAA. The group's primary responsibility is to work with volunteer teacher-coaches to provide provincial championships for Ontario's student-athletes, and also deal with issues that affect students, coaches, schools and communities, such as drug-free sport, equity, fair play, and safe schools. Unlike other of Canada's provincial high school athletics associations,

180-500: The Basilian Fathers and the Metropolitan Separate School Board opened Father Henry Carr High School under its founding principal, Fr. Thomas Mohan C.S.B. The school building was erected in 1976 on the original 21 Panorama Court building on Kipling and Albion. The school facilities in the original building consisted of one main two-story building and 16 portables, with a cafeteria, gymnasium/auditorium and

198-783: The FHC Crusaders had a rivalry with Eastern Commerce Saints until closing in 2015. The prep team has partnered with Air Jordan as the official supplier and sponsors of the Early Bird Classic and hosts the "Jordan Brand Players Lounge". The Crusaders Basketball teams host their home games in the Father Ted McLean Gymnasium, dedicated by then-principal Michael Rossetti in 2012. Humbergrove Secondary School Coordinates : 43°44′9″N 79°35′31″W  /  43.73583°N 79.59194°W  / 43.73583; -79.59194 From Misplaced Pages,

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216-632: The TDSB Toronto Lands Corporation 1966 establishments in Ontario 1988 disestablishments in Ontario Defunct schools in Toronto Hidden categories: Pages using gadget WikiMiniAtlas All articles with dead external links Articles with dead external links from August 2024 Articles with permanently dead external links Articles with short description Short description

234-991: The Toronto District School Board List of schools in the Toronto Catholic District School Board List of schools of the Conseil scolaire Viamonde Italics - Alternative school or adult secondary school | * - Non-operational | † - Demolished or sold off Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Humbergrove_Secondary_School&oldid=1242140097 " Categories : High schools in Toronto Education in Etobicoke Educational institutions established in 1966 Educational institutions disestablished in 1988 Schools in

252-1076: The 💕 Former public high school in Toronto, Ontario, Canada Humbergrove Secondary School [REDACTED] Address [REDACTED] 1760 Martin Grove Road Toronto , Ontario , M9V 3S4 Canada Coordinates 43°44′9″N 79°35′31″W  /  43.73583°N 79.59194°W  / 43.73583; -79.59194 Information School type Public High school Vocational High school Founded 1966 Status Leased out Closed 1988 School board Toronto District School Board ( Etobicoke Board of Education ) Superintendent Mary Jane McNamara Area trustee Michael Ford School number 917508 Grades 9-13 Enrollment 834 Language English Humbergrove Secondary School (also called Humbergrove SS , HSS , Humbergrove , colloquially Humbergrove Collegiate Institute ), originally known as Humbergrove Vocational School

270-714: The principal at St. Thomas More College in Saskatchewan . He died of pneumonia on November 28, 1963 in Vancouver , British Columbia . After the opening of one of Etobicoke's first Catholic high schools, Bishop Power High School for boys in 1957 by the Basilian Fathers . At that time, pupils attended Roman Catholic schools nearby such as St. Andrew, St. Angela, St. Dorothy, or St. Jude while its graduates attended either North Albion Collegiate Institute or West Humber Collegiate Institute . On September 3, 1974

288-592: The property since 2007. Carr offers the Advanced Placement (AP) academic program and is known for its elite basketball team. The motto of the school is Domine ut Videam , which translates into "Lord That I Might See". Henry Carr was a Basilian Father also known as Father "Hank" Carr. He enhanced Catholic education in Canada by broadening the curriculum at University of Toronto's University of St. Michael's College . He also arranged for St. Michael's to be

306-493: Was closed and reopened by the MSSB as Marian Academy with 165 pupils. The school closed its doors in 2002 due to declining enrolment. The school moved to the former Marian building in September 2007. The new Carr campus, at the cost of $ 10 million, consisted of the new main entrance, central community atrium, cafeteria, drama studio, labs, three automotive bays, new windows, stonework and landscaping. The former school building

324-607: Was sold to the City of Toronto in 2009 and reopened the old Panorama school building as a community hub. The renovated school was designed by Makrimichalos Cugini Architects Inc. whilst the original school building built in 1966 was designed by architect Gordon S. Adamson . Father Henry Carr Catholic Secondary School is a composite co-educational school located in the area of Finch and Martin Grove in Rexdale in northwest Etobicoke. The area

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