Father John Redmond Catholic Secondary School and Regional Arts Centre

Father John Redmond Catholic Secondary School and Regional Arts Centre (also known as Father John Redmond, Father John Redmond CSS and RAC, FJRCSS, FJR, or Redmond in short) is a Catholic high school in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is located in the New Toronto area of Etobicoke. It is operated by the Toronto Catholic District School Board (previously the Metropolitan Separate School Board) as a regional art school for grades 9-12.

Father John Redmond Catholic Secondary School and Regional Arts Centre
(originally Michael Power • St. Joseph, Alderwood Campus)
Address
28 Colonel Samuel Smith Park Drive

, ,
Canada
Coordinates43°35′40″N 79°30′59″W
Information
School typeCatholic High school
Art school
MottoCursum Consumavi Fidem Servavi
(I Have Finished The Race, I Have Kept The Faith)
Religious affiliation(s)Roman Catholic
(Basilian Fathers and Sisters of St. Joseph)
Founded1985 (MPSJ Campus)
1986 (present day)
School boardToronto Catholic District School Board
SuperintendentAdalgisio Bria
Area 2
Area trusteeTeresa Lubinski
Ward 4
School number540 / 731951
AdministratorMaria Rebelo-Da Silva
(Regional Arts Administrative Assistant)
PrincipalJohn D'Onofrio
Vice PrincipalsMonica Calligaro
Carmela Cocozulli
Grades9-12
Enrolment1193 (2017-18)
LanguageEnglish
Schedule typeTerms (Grade 9) Semesters (Grade 10-12)
Colour(s)Red, Navy and White    
Team nameRedmond Redhawks
ParishSt. Teresa
Specialist High Skills MajorHealth and Wellness
Justice, Community Safety and Emergency Services
Program FocusAdvanced Placement
Arts Focus
Regional Arts Program
Website

Redmond was founded in the spring of 1985 as the south campus of Etobicoke's first Catholic high school, Michael Power/St. Joseph High School, merged in 1982 and then became a separate, standard high school in 1986. The Regional Arts Program has since started in 2006. The school was named after Father John Redmond C.S.B. (1934-September 21, 1981), a teacher, coach, educator, priest, and principal of Michael Power.

History

Origins

Father John Redmond C.S.B. was born in Weston, Ontario in 1934 and aspired to helping others all his life. He was a faithful priest, dedicated teacher and accomplished coach.[1] Educated in Toronto at St. Michael's College School and later University of Windsor, Father Redmond was ordained a Basilian priest in 1963.

His entire professional teaching career, which spanned from 1963 to his death on September 21, 1981, revolved around Michael Power Catholic High School. He was the school's athletic director for thirteen years, principal from 1976 to 1981, and nineteen years as a teacher. He helped develop thousands of Etobicoke teenagers into responsible adults through his example of a Christian life and through the discipline of sport.

Under Redmond's tutelage, Power won fifteen Toronto and District College School Athletic Association Track Championships and, provincially, nine out of ten Ontario Federation of Secondary Schools Association Crowns. In 1976, an American reporter wrote that the Power track team won a US invitational meet over 243 schools "handily".

Redmond was inducted into the Etobicoke Sports Hall of Fame in 1999.

Background

The original home of Father John Redmond from 1985 to 2006.

During a period of reorganization by public school boards across Ontario following a decision by the Ontario Government to extend funding of Catholic schools to include secondary school grades 10 to 13 (OAC) in the 1980s, many public schools of the Etobicoke Board of Education in southern Etobicoke with low enrolment were ceded to the Metropolitan Separate School Board (later the Toronto Catholic District School Board).

Originally offered the former Mimico High School (now John English Junior Middle School), the MSSB preferred the newer, designed buildings of Kingsmill Secondary School (later Bishop Allen Academy), which were already nearby, requested the former Alderwood Collegiate Institute in Alderwood (which was closed in June 1983) to serve the rest of southern Etobicoke; Alderwood reopened as the South campus outlet of Etobicoke's first Catholic high school, Michael Power/St. Joseph High School. The school's namesake, Father John Redmond was named in his honor after serving as a Basilian priest, a principal, an educator, and prominent national track and field coach. The roots clearly relied on the Basilian motto of "Teach me Goodness, Discipline and Knowledge."

The South campus of MPSJ opened its doors in spring 1985 with 17 staff and 300 students under vice-principal Jack Smith. On September 2, 1986, the Father John Redmond community was established with the motto of Cursum Consumavi Fidem Servavi ("I Have Finished The Race, I Have Kept The Faith"). Jack Smith is the founding principal of the new school. In its first year, Father Redmond Catholic Secondary School had an enrolment of 427 students in grades 9, 10 and 11. By September 1987 grades 12 and OAC had been added and the student population reached 1140 students.

The 1960s school buildings were in a very bad state of repair forced Father John Redmond to relocate to newly constructed buildings in New Toronto (St. Teresa's parish), on the Lakeshore Psychiatric Hospital grounds beside the historic 19th century buildings of the Mimico Lunatic Asylum, which are now the site of Humber College's Lakeshore Campus, in September 2006. As the Toronto Catholic District School Board does not operate an arts school in Etobicoke, Father John Redmond was chosen as the Catholic board's Regional Arts Centre on June 12, 2005. The school serves Catholic students from the former Lakeshore Municipalities (Mimico, New Toronto, Long Branch) in southern Etobicoke.

Feeder Schools

  • St. Leo Catholic Elementary School, Mimico
  • Holy Trinity Catholic Elementary School
  • St. Ambrose Catholic Elementary School
  • St. Josaphat Catholic Elementary School (Ukrainian Catholic)

Notable alumni

See also

References

  1. "Etobicoke Sports Hall of Fame - Inductees 1999 - Father John Redmond". www.etobicokesports.ca. Archived from the original on 2013-03-29.
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