Guelph Collegiate Vocational Institute


The Guelph Collegiate Vocational Institute is a public high school in Guelph, Ontario, Canada. The school is the oldest continuously operating public high school in Guelph, and the third oldest in the province of Ontario, Canada.

History

The high school which eventually became known as the Guelph Collegiate and Vocational Institute was founded in the early-mid-19th century by John Galt, also the founder of Guelph, Ontario. The school was originally housed in a large four window log building known as "the Priory"; itself one of the first buildings constructed in Guelph. In 1854 the school moved to its current site on Paisley Road due to the construction of the Grand Trunk Railway.
The original building on the new site was torn down after a few decades and a new school constructed. Eventually a wooden gymnasium was added in 1886, and the school remained the same until 1906, when a large new wing was added to the left of the bell tower.
Guelph Collegiate Vocational Institute had Canada's first high school lunch cafeteria.
By this time the school was developing a reputation second to none in the province. Finally, by the nineteen twenties there were serious problems with overcrowding. In 1923 a new building opened that included modern plumbing, a massive skylight covering the large, two story, open auditorium area. It was called the most modern and upscale school building in Ontario.
The older buildings were connected to the school and used periodically before they were torn down in 1962 to facilitate several more additions including a modern gym, business and science wing, and tech wings.
Over the years tens of thousands of students have passed through the halls of GCVI, and many have left a memorable and distinct mark on the history of Canada.
Accomplished alumni include: Col. John McCrae, Hugh C. Guthrie, Ed Joliffe, George Alexander Drew, and Donna Strickland.
A bronze plaque memorial to Col John McCrae was erected by the Guelph Collegiate Vocational Institute.

Layout

The Guelph Collegiate Vocational Institute consists of four main buildings. The Old Building consists of three levels. The bottom level holds the visual arts department, chemistry department and a general sciences department. The floor above holds the guidance department, main office, geography department, math department and an auditorium that extends up into the top floor. The top floor holds the English department, family studies department and the biology department.
The New Building also has three levels. On the bottom level are the business and economics departments, the physics department and the nurse's office. On the floor above, there is a computer education department. The top floor has the history and the modern languages departments.
Building C consists of two levels. On the first level are three separate gymnasiums. Above is the school cafeteria.
Building D holds the school's technology departments and music department. The technology department has nine different shops. They include: integrated technology, transportation technology, manufacturing technology, construction technology, communication technology, technological design, computer engineering technology and computer and information science.

Architecture

The Old Building of the Guelph Collegiate Vocational Institute consists of building styles that are unique only to that school in the City of Guelph. The original oak doors are still present from the building's original construction in 1923. Marble and granite encase all of the hallway floors throughout The Old Building. The hallways on the main floor of The Old Building measure an outstanding 18 ft. in height. The main entrance way into the school is surrounded by a large archway. It is easy to see the vast number of students who have walked the halls of G.C.V.I. as there are large indents that have been left in the granite stairways of the school from many thousands of feet walking up and down them each day.

Notable alumni