Ashbury College
Ashbury College is an independent day and boarding school located in Rockcliffe Park, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. It was founded in 1891 and moved to its current location in 1910. Previously, it occupied what now houses Senate of Canada offices. It is an International Baccalaureate World School, a member of the Canadian Accredited Independent Schools, and a member of Round Square. The school currently enrolls approximately 550 senior and 150 junior students. The current Head of School is Norman Southward, with Kendal Young directing the Junior School and Gary Godkin as the Head of Senior School.
Ashbury College is an independent private school which offers a joint Ontario High School Diploma and Ashbury College Diploma, as well as the International Baccalaureate Diploma and International Baccalaureate Bilingual Diploma. Originally a single-gender boys school, Ashbury began accepting girls in 1982. Currently, the male/female student proportion is approximately 50/50. The campus is 13 acres in Rockcliffe Park. Tuition fees for the 2018-2019 school year are $26,300 for day students and $64,700 for boarding students. There are 108 boarders yearly from approximately 30 countries throughout the world.
Notable alumni include John Turner, Canada's seventeenth Prime Minister and Stockwell Day, the first leader of the now defunct Canadian Alliance and later a cabinet minister. Other alumni include Ben Barry, founder of the modeling agency Ben Barry Agency Inc.; Canadian war artist and heraldry expert Alan Beddoe, actor Matthew Perry, journalist Adrian Harewood, and Roya Shams, a student who, with the help of Toronto Star employees, was able to flee Kandahar, Afghanistan after Roya received from Taliban threats after the murder of her father, an Afghan police commander.
History
In 1888, a young Oxford graduate George Wollcombe, B.A. started his career at Bishop's College School, founded in 1836 and Bishop's University, founded in 1843 when he was invited by the BCS Rector/ BU Principal Rev. Dr. Thomas Adams. In 1891, he was recommended by the head of Bishop's, and some Ottawa-based parents of his BCS students to start a school there. The Ottawa school eventually becomes Ashbury College today where he served as the headmaster for 42 years from 1891 to 1933. He still found time regularly to make the four-hour train journey to Lennoxville to teach his classes. He obtained an ad eundem Master of Arts from Bishop's in 1906 without actually enrolled as a student by the arrangements of Bishop's with Oxford. Rhode Scholar Dr. C.L. Odgen Glass also graduated from BCS and BU in 1935 and served in Ashbury as the fourth Headmaster, but later returned to BCS. The BCS-Ashbury Cup, the Oxford University and Bishop's University arms presented on the stained glass in Ashbury Memorial Chapel are signs of the traditional friendship between these institutions. Wollcombe also eventually became the headmaster of BCS later.The three-room school for boys was originally located on Wellington Street in Ottawa, but soon moved to bigger quarters also on Wellington Street. In 1900, Ashbury College moved to Argyle Avenue near the present Museum of Nature. In 1905, Ashbury College had twenty borders, fifty day boys, led by the headmaster and a staff of five graduates. There was a preparatory department for little boys. The students were prepared for the Royal Military College of Canada and Universities. Eleven boys had entered the Royal Military College of Canada between 1900-1905.
In 1910, the school - called Ashbury College after Woollcombe's English home - moved to its current location on 13 acres in the village of Rockcliffe Park.
Arthur Le B. Weeks designed the Ashbury College on Mariposa Avenue. With the support of Ottawa benefactors, a new building was constructed for the 115 students, 48 of whom were boarders.
Ashbury was originally an all-boys institution but began admitting women for grades 9-12 in 1982 and then admitted girls for the first time into fourth grade in 2010. The institution is divided between the Senior School and the Junior School, who have separate faculties and students, but share resources such as the cafeteria, gymnasiums, art departments, music facilities, theatre, and the chapel.
Ashbury College's innovative and modern adaptations include Canada's first teaching green roof, and a LEED Gold-certified boys' residence. Ashbury College was included amongst other architecturally interesting and historically significant buildings in Doors Open Ottawa, held June 2 and 3, 2012.
Stained Glass
In 1952, a stained glass window depicting Sir Galahad was erected by Robert McCausland Limited as a memorial dedicated to the Old Boys who served during the Great War and World War II.The Memorial Window in memory of Canon Woollcombe, Ashbury's founder and Headmaster, was unveiled and dedicated on October 29, 1961 by the Venerable Archdeacon C. G. Hepburn. The window features 7 symbolic designs: the Crown and Palm, for Wisdom; Ivy for Fidelity; a Vine symbolizing the Blood of Christ; a Sheaf of Wheat for the Body of Christ; Oak leaves for Strength; and a Cross and Wreath signifying Peace. The crests refer to Canon Woollcombe's academic affiliations to Bishop's University, Oxford University, McGill University and Ashbury College. The three large windows show pictorial representations of Canon Woollcombe as Teacher, Preacher and Counsellor. The large left hand window includes the Torch of Light; the Centre window shows a Spiritual Flame, with the School Motto in the Circle surrounding Canon Woollcombe, and the Ashbury buildings in the background. The Lamp of learning is at the top of the right hand window.
A window is dedicated to the memory of alumni Michael F. A. Ney R.C.N., who was killed in an accident in Kenya on October 31, 1954 while serving as an inspector with the Kenyan Police Force. The 1955 design includes the crests of the Royal Roads Military College and of Trinity College at the University of Toronto and the message "First unto God and then to the Queen". A window is dedicated to Alfred Beaufort Belcher a member of Ashbury staff from 1942 until his death April 4, 1963. The 1955 design includes the crests of the Royal Military College of Canada and a few lines of one of Belcher's poems "and God runs quiet fingers through...the tired hair of the World".
Senior School
Ashbury College offers the traditional Ontario Secondary School Diploma but also the International Baccalaureate Diploma, otherwise known as the IB. Students will traditionally take six academic subjects each year and the Senior School program is grades 9 through 12. Ashbury follows a traditional approach to education in the liberal arts and requires participation in athletics and volunteering/community service in order to graduate. Approximately 20% of the students are considered international students. Each graduating class is approximately 140 students.Admission
Most students are accepted into grade 4, grade 7, and grade 9, deemed "admission points". Ashbury's selective admissions process has approximately 25 spots per year for boarding students and 110 spaces a year for day students. Spaces are filled for each class in through two rounds: Round I and Round II. Round I begins in early October with offers extended in mid-December while Round II begins in the last week of January and offers are extended in the first week of March. 90% of students are selected in Round I and only Round I candidates are considered for scholarships. Students are selected through a rigorous admissions process which includes an entrance exam and an interview.House System & Prefects
The House system has been in place since 1937 and Ashbury students are divided into four houses upon entering in grade 9. Each house has roughly 30 students per grade and 120 in each house during any academic year with the exception of Wollocombe House that has roughly 80. Students with older siblings or alumni parents are put in their "family" house and others are randomly assigned. Houses are permanent from grade nine until graduation and identification is often through the house-specific neck-tie or commonly worn house T-shirts during physical education, house events or after 4 pm when No. 3 uniform can be worn. The houses compete for the "Wilson Shield" which is awarded at the end of the academic year. The houses are:- Woollcombe House
- New House
- Connaught House
- Alexander House
University Placement
Ashbury College offers the International Baccalaureate Bilingual Diploma program and has had a university placement rate of 100% for the past fifteen years. Graduates often matriculate to colleges and universities in Canada, the United States, and around the globe.In 2018, the average SAT score from Ashbury College was 1255/1600, and the average ACT score was 26/36. Moreover, the average IB Diploma score is 33, 3 points above the global average of 30. In that same year, eighty percent of students were admitted to their first choice university, and the most popular university choices were the University of Toronto, the University of Ottawa, McGill University, and Queen's University. Other graduates are enrolled in US post-secondary schools such as Amherst College, Brown University, Cornell University, and Harvard University.
Student Life
Students in grade 9 and 10 are required to participate in co-curricular activities in all three terms. Grade 11 students must participate in co-curricular activities in two terms and grade 12s in one term. As a requirement for the Ontario Diploma, all students complete a minimum of 40 Community Service Hours. Ashbury also offers co-curricular programs in bilingual debating, drama & theatre, Model United Nations, the Yearbook Committee, and the 'Blazer', among many others. Additionally, Ashbury students can complete requirements for The Duke of Edinburgh's Award.Athletics
Ashbury College is a member of the Canadian Association of Independent Schools, the Ottawa Independent Schools Athletic Association, the Ottawa-Carleton Catholic Intermediate Athletic Association, the National Capital Secondary School Athletic Association and the Ontario Federation of School Athletic Associations. Ashbury is recognized for its strong athletics program. In 2017, the senior boys varsity basketball team won the Ontario provincial championship, and the school also captured OFSAA medals in rugby, swimming, Nordic skiing and track and field. They also won the OFSAA football independent bowl in 2018.Ashbury maintains teams for the following sports:
- Badminton
- Baseball
- Basketball
- Cross country running
- Curling
- Downhill Skiing
- Field Hockey
- Football
- Golf
- Ice hockey
- Rowing
- Rugby union
- Soccer
- Softball
- Swimming
- Tennis
- Touch football
- Track and Field
- Ultimate Frisbee
- Volleyball
Junior School
- Dragons
- Hobbits
- Wizards
- Goblins
Maclaren Hall (formerly, Great Hall)
Maclaren Hall is Ashbury's cafeteria. Opened in 2004, the MacLaren Hall serves breakfast, lunch and dinner for boarders and lunch for day students. Open from 7 am to 7 pm, MacLaren Hall offers selections for vegetarians as well as those with other needs. In addition to cash being tendered, students are able to use their student cards to access meal plans and "flex dollars", which is a refillable debit card system.Maclaren Hall is one part of an addition to the College that was completed in 2004 as a part of the "Building Futures" fundraising campaign. Other additions included a new double gymnasium, four new classrooms, a student common area, a staff room, and several offices. The increase in square footage has added more than 20% of usable space to the school.
The Great Hall was renamed in 2006 as the Maclaren Hall in honour of alumnus Don Maclaren.
In 2014, the Creative Learning Centre opened, and in 2018, the school celebrated the groundbreaking of a new Centre for Science & Innovation.
Notable Ashbury College alumni
- John Turner, Canadian Prime Minister
- Stockwell Day, Member of House of Commons
- E. P. Taylor, businessman
- Douglass North, Recipient of Nobel Prize in Economics
- Lt. Gen. Guy Simonds, Canadian army officer, commander of the II Canadian Corps during World War II, later named Chief of the General Staff
- Matthew Perry, actor best known for his role as Chandler on the hit TV show 'Friends'
- Stewart Johnston, businessman that is President of The Sports Network and Bell Media Media Sales and Marketing
- Max Graham, Canadian DJ/Producer
- Ben Barry Entrepreneur
- John Emilius Fauquier Royal Canadian Air Force Commodore
- Ryan Semple, 2006, 2010 Olympian, Skiing.
- Trevor Matthews, Founder and CEO of Brookstreet Pictures
- Donald Steven, composer
- Adrian Harewood, CBC news journalist
- Derek Harvie, TV & Film writer and producer. Nominated for Peabody Award and winner of Golden Raspberry award for screenplay Freddy Got Fingered.
- Arthur Fogel, Music Promoter and Executive, Live Nation Entertainment
- Roya Shams
- Andrew Brewin
Controversy
One of the perpetrators pleaded guilty to assault and battery and was sentenced to four years probation. He apologized to the victim and his family, saying he was pulling a common prank. The teachers and the school have been criticized for the handling of the incident. The victim and their family submitted victim impact statements detailing the effect the events had on their family.
Two teachers were found guilty for “ in their duty of care” by the Ontario Teachers’ College. The college’s disciplinary panel initially ruled the teachers guilty as they failed to immediately report the sexual assault to the parents of the boy. However, in December 2015, the two teachers were fully exonerated and charges dismissed, after winning an appeal in the Ontario Divisional Court.