- Miles Macdonell Collegiate 60th Anniversary Gifts
- Miles Macdonell Collegiate 60th Anniversary Celebration
We are a school committed to fulfilling the mission of River East Transcona School Division: to provide relevant, progressive educational programming and supportive services in a safe, stimulating learning environment. Like most of his peers, Jordan hadn’t put a lot of thought into what he wanted to do after completing high school when he first entered Miles Macdonell Collegiate in Winnipeg, Manitoba. He did, however, know what he was passionate about: sports, and people.
The names of many educational facilities in Manitoba commemorate historical personalities. Unfortunately, the basis for some names has not been recorded. This project will attempt to list the basis for as many Manitoba school names as possible. Those with obvious names (for example, those named for the street or town in which they are situated) will not be included.
NOTE: This is a work in progress, and information will be added as it becomes available. Please send corrections and updates to Gordon Goldsborough at webmaster@mhs.mb.ca.
Link to:
University of Manitoba | University of Winnipeg | Brandon University | Winnipeg School Board | Brandon School Board
School name | Manitoba City/Town | Notes | Sources |
Alf Cuthbert School | Moosehorn | Named for school trustee Alfred O. Cuthbert. | [20] |
Andrew Mynarski School | Winnipeg | Named for war hero Andrew Charles Mynarski. | MHS |
Winnipeg | Opened in 1953; named for Kildonan municipal councillor Angus McKay. | J. Smith [7] | |
Winnipeg | Named for teacher and volunteer nurse Anna Gibson (1896-1918). | MHS | |
Winnipeg | Named for school trustee Arthur H. Day. | [14] | |
Winnipeg (Fort Garry) | Opened in 1975; named for school division superintendent Arthur A. Leach. | MHS | |
Arthur Meighen School | Portage la Prairie | Named for lawyer and politician Arthur Meighen. | MHS |
Arthur Oliver School | Winnipeg | Named for school board official Arthur Oliver. | MHS |
Arthur E. Wright Community School | Winnipeg | Named for politician Arthur E. Wright. | MHS |
Winnipeg (St. James) | Named for pioneer Andrew Graham Ballenden Bannatyne. | MHS | |
Lt. Col. Barker VC School | Dauphin | Named for aviator William George Barker. | MHS |
Winnipeg | Named for school trustee and municipal councillor Bernie Wolfe. | J. Smith [7] | |
Bertrun E. Glavin School | Winnipeg | Opened in September 1973 in River East School Division; named for school trustee Bertrun E. Glavin. | [5], J. Smith [7] |
Betty Gibson School | Brandon | Named for educator Betty Gibson. | MHS |
Winnipeg | |||
Winnipeg | Named for municipal official George Thomas Chapman. | MHS | |
Collicutt School | Winnipeg | Named for West Kildonan municipal official and community activist Albert Hedley Collicutt. | [40] |
D. R. Hamilton School | Cross Lake | ||
Winnipeg | Named for St. Vital School Board chair Dr. D. W. Penner. | MHS | |
Winnipeg | Named for educator Daniel J. McIntyre. | MHS | |
David Livingstone School | Winnipeg | Named for the explorer, doctor, philanthropist, and missionary David Livingstone (1813-1873). | MHS, [15] |
Winnipeg | Named for early explorer and cartographer of Western Canada, David Thompson. | ||
Winnipeg | Named for Frederick Temple Hamilton-Temple-Blackwood, First Marquess of Dufferin (1826-1902), who visited Winnipeg during his tenure as Governor General of Canada from 1872 to 1878. | MHS | |
Winnipeg | Named for Albert Henry George Grey (1851-1917), the 9th Governor General of Canada, who served from 1904 to 1911. | MHS | |
Edmund Partridge School | Winnipeg | Named for municipal official Edmund Partridge. | MHS |
Constable Edward Finney School | Winnipeg | Named for police officer Edward Finney. | MHS |
Edward Schreyer School | Beausejour | Name for politician Edward R. Schreyer. | MHS |
Winnipeg | Named for M. Ellen Douglass, the school catered to the needs of handicapped children. Constructed at 700 Elgin Avenue in 1960, the school was relocated in September 1980 to Lord Roberts School. | MHS | |
Elwick Community School | Winnipeg | Named for community activist Neville Meldrum Elwick and his wife, Ursula Stella Peterman (c1914-1967) | [39] |
Pinawa | Named for engineer F. W. Gilbert. | [21] | |
East St. Paul | Named for dentist and school trustee F. W. L. Hamilton. | [3] | |
Winnipeg | Named for British scientist Michael Faraday (1791-1867). | [28] | |
Brandon | Named for Alexander Fleming. | MHS | |
Florence Nightingale School | Winnipeg | Named for British nursing and sanitation reformer Florence Nightingale (1820-1910). | [28] |
Winnipeg | Named for Governor-General Georges Philias Vanier (1888-1967). | MHS | |
General Wolfe School | Winnipeg | Named for the British military general who won the battle at the Plains of Abraham, in 1759. | MHS |
Brandon | Named for school board official George A. Fitton. | MHS | |
George Johnson Middle School | Gimli | Named for physician George Johnson. | MHS |
George McDowell School | Winnipeg | Named for horticulturist George S. McDowell. | [9] |
Winnipeg (St. James) | Named for school board chairman George Waters. | [12] | |
Winnipeg | Named for physician and educator Gordon Bell. | MHS | |
CFB Gimli | Named for Service Flying Training School No. 18 (RCAF Gimli Station) Commanding Officer Acheson Gosford Goulding. | [41] | |
Virden | Named for lawyer H. H. Goulter. | MHS | |
Governor Semple School | Winnipeg | Named for Robert Semple. | MHS |
Gray Academy | Winnipeg | Named for Gerald B. Gray. | [4] |
Greenway School | Winnipeg | Named for Manitoba premier Thomas Greenway. | MHS |
Winnipeg | Named for long-time school trustee Harry Avery. | MHS | |
Winnipeg | Named for administrator H. L. Softley. | [31] | |
Winnipeg | Named for municipal official Harry Paul. | [26] | |
Brandon | Named for long-time Brandon teacher Lily A. Harrison. | MHS | |
Harold Edwards School | Southport, RM of Portage la Prairie | Named for Royal Canadian Air Force Air Marshal Harold “Gus” Edwards (1892-1952) | MHS |
Winnipeg | Named for school official Harold Coveney Hatcher. | MHS | |
Hazel M. Kellington School | Neepawa | Named for educator Hazel M. Kellington. | [25] |
École Henri-Bergeron | Winnipeg | Named for broadcaster Henri Bergeron. | [31] |
Henry G. Izatt Middle School | Winnipeg | Opened in 1998; named for school division superintendent Henry G. Izatt. | MHS |
Winnipeg | Named for judge Hugh John Macdonald. | MHS | |
Winnipeg | Named for Alexander Kennedy Isbister. | MHS | |
J. A. Cuddy School | Sanford | Named for James Anthony Cuddy, President of the Manitoba School Trustees Association in the early 1950s. | MHS |
Winnipeg | Named for architect James Bertram Mitchell. | MHS | |
Winnipeg | Named for educator J. H. Bruns. | MHS | |
J. M. Young School | Eden | Named for school trustee J. M. Young. | [32] |
Brandon | Named for educator J. R. Reid. | MHS | |
J. R. Walkof School | Winkler | Named for educator John Robert Walkof. | MHS |
James K. MacIsaac School | Winnipeg | Originally named Our Lady of Victory School, in 1949 it was renamed for cleric James K. MacIsaac. It reverted to the original name in 1999. | [26] |
Winnipeg | |||
John Dafoe School | Winnipeg | Named for journalist John Dafoe. | MHS |
Winnipeg | Named for market gardener and North Kildonan municipal councillor John De Graff. | J. Smith [7] | |
John Henderson Junior High | Winnipeg | Named for farmer and municipal official John Henderson. | MHS |
Winnipeg [West Kildonan] | Named for municipal official John H. Gunn. | [35] | |
Winnipeg | Named for municipal official John W. Gunn. | [23] | |
Winnipeg | Named for educator and cleric John Mark King. | MHS | |
Winnipeg | Named for fur trader and pioneer John Pritchard. | MHS | |
John G. Stewart School | Winnipeg | Named for educator J. G. Stewart. | [24] |
Winnipeg (St. James) | Named for pioneer John Taylor. | MHS | |
Joseph H. Kerr School | Snow Lake | ||
Winnipeg | Named for police officer Joseph Teres. | [10] | |
Joseph Wolinsky Collegiate | Winnipeg | Named for businessman and philanthropist Joseph Wolinsky. | MHS |
Winnipeg | Named for community activist Julia Clark. | MHS | |
Julie Lindal School | Ilford | ||
Ken Seaford Junior High | Winnipeg | Named for Kenneth G. Seaford. | [37] |
Krawchyk School | Winnipeg | Originally named Brooklands School, it was renamed for politician Stephen Nicholas Krawchyk after his death. After sitting empty for several years, the school building was demolished on 6 February 2009. | MHS; Winnipeg Free Press, 7 February 2009, page B1 |
Winnipeg | |||
Winnipeg | Named for Louis Lavallee and other members of the Lavallee family | [42] | |
Léo Rémillard School | Winnipeg | Named for Léo Rémillard. | MHS |
Winnipeg | Named for British soldier and Boer War general Frederick Roberts (1832-1914). | MHS | |
Winnipeg | Named for Thomas Douglas, Fifth Earl of Selkirk. | MHS | |
Winnipeg | |||
Collège Louis-Riel | Winnipeg (St. Boniface) | ||
Winnipeg | Named for teacher and journalist William Fisher Luxton. | MHS | |
Winnipeg | Named for clergyman Robert Machray. | MHS | |
MacNeill School | Dauphin | Named for Henry N. MacNeill. | MHS |
Major Pratt School | Russell | Named for educator and historian Albert Maurice Pratt. | MHS |
Margaret Barbour Collegiate | The Pas | Named for educator Margaret Inez Barbour. | MHS |
Named for Second World War casuality Margaret Hayworth. | [33] | ||
Winnipeg | Named for nurse Margaret Scott. | MHS | |
École Margaret Underhill | Winnipeg | Named for educator Margaret Underhill. | [30] |
Ecole Marie-Anne-Gaboury | Winnipeg | Formerly known as Hastings Immersion School, it was named for pioneer Marie-Anne Gaboury. | [27] |
Mary Duncan Elementary | The Pas | Named for educator Mary Duncan. | MHS |
Mary Montgomery School | Virden | Named for educator Mary Montgomery. | [22] |
Mary Newell School | Granville Lake | ||
Brandon | Named for war veteran Joseph McLaren. | MHS | |
Mel Johnson School | Wabowden | ||
Winnipeg | Named for pioneer Miles Macdonell. | MHS | |
Winnipeg | Named for politician Stewart Mulvey. | MHS | |
Winnipeg | Named for physician Murdoch Mackay. | MHS | |
Neelin High School | Brandon | Named for educator T. A. Neelin. | MHS |
Neil Campbell School | Winnipeg | Opened in 1956; named for Kildonan municipal councillor and school trustee Neil Campbell. | J. Smith [7] |
Nellie McClung Collegiate | Manitou | Named for feminist Nelly Letitia McClung. | MHS |
Winnipeg | Named for School Board official Nelson K. McIntyre. | MHS | |
Winnipeg (Point Douglas) | Named for Manitoba premier John Norquay. | MHS | |
Winnipeg | Named for educator Oliver Victor Jewitt. | MHS | |
Oscar Blackburn School | South Indian Lake | Named for educator Oscar G. Blackburn. | [18] |
Chief Peguis Junior High School | Winnipeg | Opened in 1970; named for Chief Peguis. | MHS |
Headingley | When the Headingley School in North Headingley burned to the ground in the early twentieth century, it was replaced in South Headingley with a school that “rose from the ashes” in an analogous way to the mythical Phoenix bird. | [1] | |
Collège Pierre-Elliott-Trudeau | Winnipeg | ||
Winnipeg | Named for clergyman William Cyprian Pinkham. The school's first principal was Frank Howard Schofield. | MHS | |
Winnipeg | Opened in 1920; named after Prince Edward who later became King Edward VIII. | J. Smith [7] | |
Princess Margaret School | Winnipeg | Opened in 1955; named for the sister of Queen Elizabeth II. | J. Smith [7] |
Winnipeg | Named for educator and clergyman Joseph Walter Sparling. | MHS | |
Winnipeg | Named for labour leader R. B. Russell. | MHS | |
R. D. Parker Collegiate | Thompson | Named for mining engineer Ralph Douglas Parker (1898-1983). | |
Winnipeg | Opened in 1962; named for West Kildonan municipal councillor Robert F. Morrison. | MHS | |
R. H. G. Bonnycastle School | Winnipeg | Named for businessman Richard H. G. Bonnycastle. | MHS |
R. J. Waugh School | Carberry | Named for physician Reuben J. Waugh. | MHS |
R. W. Bobby Bend School | Stonewall | Named for teacher and politican Bobby Bend. | MHS |
Winnipeg | Named for fur trader Pierre Radisson. | J. Smith [7] | |
Winnipeg | Named for politician Ralph Maybank. | MHS | |
East St. Paul | Named for market gardener Robert Percy Andrews. | [3] | |
Robert Smith School | Selkirk | Named for municipal official Robert Smith. | [33] |
Winnipeg | Named for school division secretary-treasurer Robert Houston Smith. | MHS | |
Rod Martin School | Moose Lake | Named for municipal official Roderick “Rod” Martin. | [29] |
Roland Lauze School | Nelson House | Named for educator Roland Lauze. | [19] |
Ross L. Gray School | Sprague | Named for community activist Ross L. Gray. | MHS |
Ruth Betts School | Flin Flon | ||
Ruth Hooker School | Selkirk | Named for community activist Ruth C. Hooker. | [13] |
St. Amant School | Winnipeg | Named for health care pioneer Beatrice St. Amant | [38] |
Winnipeg | Named for municipal official Simon St. Germain | MHS | |
Samuel Burland School | Winnipeg | Named for educator Samuel Burland. | MHS |
Sansome School | Winnipeg | Named for municipal official Joseph H. Sansome. | MHS |
Scott Bateman Middle School | The Pas | Named for educator B. Scott Bateman. | MHS |
Shevchenko School | Vita | Named for Ukrainian poet Taras Hryhorovych Shevchenko (1814-1861). | |
Sigurbjorg Stefansson Early School | Gimli | Named for educator Sigurbjorg Stefansson. | [2] |
Sir John Franklin School | Winnipeg | Named for British naval officer and Arctic explorer John Franklin (1786-1847). | [28] |
Sisler High School | Winnipeg | Named for educator William James Sisler. | MHS |
Sister MacNamara School | Winnipeg | Named for educator Geraldine MacNamara. | MHS |
Smith-Jackson School | Dauphin | Named for community activist William Smith-Jackson | MHS |
Winnipeg | Named for politician Stanley Howard Knowles. | MHS | |
Winnipeg | Named for aviation pioneer Frederick J. Stevenson. | MHS | |
Winnipeg | Named for cleric Alexandre-Antonin Taché. | [43] | |
Taylor Elementary School | Swan River | Named for early teacher Robert Gardner Taylor. | MHS |
Thomas Greenway Middle School | Crystal City | Named for Manitoba premier Thomas Greenway. | MHS |
École Van Belleghem | Winnipeg | Named for politican Joseph Gustave Van Belleghem. | MHS |
Vermette School | Winnipeg (St. Vital) | Named for early St. Vital resident William Vermette (c1858-1925) | MHS |
Victor Mager School | Winnipeg | Named for politician Victor Magar. | MHS |
Victor H. L. Wyatt School | Winnipeg | Named for educator Victor H. L. Wyatt. | [8] |
Vincent Massey Collegiate | Winnipeg | Named for Governor-General Charles Vincent Massey (1887-1967). | MHS |
Vincent Massey High School | Brandon | Named for Governor-General Charles Vincent Massey (1887-1967). | MHS |
W. C. Miller Collegiate | Altona | Named for politician William Conrad Miller. | MHS |
Walter Whyte School | Grand Marais | Named for businessman Walter H. Whyte. | [36] |
William Morton Collegiate | Gladstone | Named for politician William Morton. | MHS |
Winnipeg | Named for renowned Canadian physician William Osler (1849-1919). | [34] | |
William S. Patterson School | Clandeboye | Formally named Clandeboye School, when a new structure was erected, it was named for school inspector William S. Patterson. | [6] |
William Whyte School | Winnipeg | Named for railwayman William Whyte. | MHS |
Winnipeg | Named for an area of Winnipeg which, in turn, is named for soldier Garnet Joseph Wolseley. | MHS | |
Woodsworth School | Winnipeg | Possibly named for cleric J. S. Woodsworth. | [35] |
Yellowquill School | Portage la Prairie |
University of Manitoba
Building | Notes |
Allen | Named for early professor Frank Allen. |
Armes | Named for early professor Henry P. Armes. |
Arthur V. Mauro | Name for former University Chancellor Arthur Mauro. |
Brodie | Named for philanthropists Earle and Marion Brodie. |
Buller | Named for early professor Arthur Henry Reginald Buller. |
Chown | Named for Henry Havelock Chown. |
Drake | Named for Drake International, a firm founded in Winnipeg by businessmen J. R. Shore and William Pollock, which made a major contribution to the building fund. [16] |
Duff Roblin | Named for politician Dufferin Roblin. |
Elizabeth Dafoe | Named for librarian Elizabeth Dafoe. |
Ellis | Named for Joseph Henry Ellis. |
Fitzgerald | Named for artist Lionel Lemoine Fitzgerald. |
Fletcher Argue | Named for early professor Robert Fletcher Argue. |
Frank Kennedy | Named for physical education director Frank Kennedy. |
Helen Glass | Named for nursing educator Helen Preston Glass. [11] |
Isbister | Named for lawyer and philanthropist Alexander Kennedy Isbister. |
Machray | Named for cleric Robert Machray. |
Marcel A. Desautels | Named for philanthropist Marcel A. Desautels. |
Mary Speechly | Named for Mary Barrett Speechly. |
Max Bell | Named for businessman George Maxwell Bell. |
Parker | Named for early professor Matthew Archibald Parker. |
Robson | Named for Hugh Amos Robson. |
Russell | Named for early professor John A. Russell. |
Schultz | Named for Robert B. Schultz. |
Sinnott | Named for cleric Alfred Arthur Sinnott. |
Tache | Named for cleric Alexandre-Antonin Taché. |
Tier | Named for early professor William Tier. |
Wallace | Named for early professor Robert Charles Wallace. |
University of Winnipeg
Building | Notes |
Ashdown | Named for businessman James Henry Ashdown. |
Bryce | Named for cleric George Bryce. |
Duckworth | Named for University administrator Henry Edmison “Harry” Duckworth. |
Graham | Named for educator William Creighton Graham. |
Lockhart | Named for University administrator Wilfred Cornet Lockhart. |
MacNamara | Named for community activist Geraldine MacNamara. |
Helen Betty Osborne | Named for murder victim Helen Betty Osborne. |
Riddell | Named for cleric John Henry Riddell. |
Sparling | Named for cleric Joseph Walter Sparling. |
Wesley |
Brandon University
Building | Notes | Sources |
Brodie | Named for businessman and philanthropist John R. Brodie. | |
Dr. James & Mrs. Lucille Brown Health Studies Complex | Named for physician James S. Brown and his wife | |
Champ Gymnasium | Named for journalist Henry Champ. | |
Darrach | Named for nurse and philanthropist Sarah Persis Johnson Darrach. | |
Flora Cowan | Named for businesswoman Flora Cowan. | |
Jeff Umphrey | Named for businessman E. Jefferson Umphrey. | [17] |
Knowles-Douglas | Named for politicians Stanley Howard Knowles and Thomas C. “Tommy” Douglas. | |
McKenzie | Named for businessman and philanthropist Albert Edward McKenzie. | |
McMaster | Commemorates the university’s former affiliation with McMaster University. | MHS |
George T. Richardson | Named for businessman George T. Richardson. |
See also:
Memorable Manitobans: School Inspectors of Manitoba
Sources:
1. Larry Taylor, Winnipeg, 19 November 2008.
2. Joan Christenson, 21 December 2009.
3. Heritage, a Story of East St. Paul, by Robert Andrews School, 1967. [Manitoba Legislative Library]
4. “Philanthropist wasn’t flamboyant” by Bill Redekop, Winnipeg Free Press, 14 October 2010, page B2.
5. “Staff planning for a new school,” Winnipeg Free Press, 13 July 1974, page 40.
6. Lynn Nolden, 11 October 2011.
7. Jim Smith, June 2013.
8. Nathan Kramer, 25 October 2013.
9. Nathan Kramer, 28 October 2013.
10. Nathan Kramer, 4 November 2013.
11. “New nursing centre at U of M,” Winnipeg Free Press, 15 September 1999, page 4.
12. Nathan Kramer, 27 November 2013.
13. Nathan Kramer, 5 December 2013.
14. Nathan Kramer, 18 December 2013.
15. Nathan Kramer, 23 December 2013.
16. “U of M centre opens,” Winnipeg Free Press, 2 June 1987, page 33; “U of M inspires hometown boy to forge fortune,” Winnipeg Free Press, 16 October 1987, page 25.
17. “Mental research centre opened,” Winnipeg Free Press, 14 September 1970, page 65.
18. Obituary [Oscar G. Blackburn], Winnipeg Free Press, 5 March 2007, page 18.
19. Obituary [Roland Lauze], Winnipeg Free Press, 9 February 1970, page 27.
20. Obituary [Alfred Otto Cuthbert], Winnipeg Free Press, 30 March 1970, page 32.
21. Nathan Kramer, 10 January 2014.
22. Nathan Kramer, 27 January 2014.
23. Nathan Kramer, 3 February 2014.
24. Nathan Kramer, 5 February 2014.
25. Nathan Kramer, 8 February 2014.
26. Nathan Kramer, 17 February 2014.
27. “Happy anniversary,” Winnipeg Free Press Weekly, South Edition, 5 November 1989, page 2.
28. “Impressive Empire Day services held,” Manitoba Free Press, 24 May 1924, page 4.
29. “Timber operation short of cutters,” Winnipeg Free Press, 17 May 1974, page 6. “Blaze claims northern community’s school,” Winnipeg Free Press, 15 February 2005, page A7. “Fire fast-tracks construction of new school at Moose Lake,” Winnipeg Free Press, 18 February 2005, page A14. Schedule: LA 0018 - Voter Lists, Accession: GR 10171, Location: G 13136, Item: The Pas, Archives of Manitoba.
30. Nathan Kramer, 21 March 2014.
31. Nathan Kramer, 1 April 2014.
32. Nathan Kramer, 5 April 2014.
33. Nathan Kramer, 9 April 2014.
34. Nathan Kramer, 12 April 2014.
35. Nathan Kramer, 15 April 2014.
36. Nathan Kramer, 21 April 2014.
37. Nathan Kramer, 10 July 2014.
38. Nathan Kramer, 23 December 2014.
39. Nathan Kramer, 2 January 2015.
40. Nathan Kramer, 24 March 2015.
41. Nathan Kramer, 17 April 2015.
42. Nathan Kramer, 2 May 2015.
43. Nathan Kramer, 15 August 2015.
“New school opens at Moose Lake,” Thompson Citizen, 1 October 2010.
This page was prepared by Nathan Kramer and Gordon Goldsborough.
Page revised: 6 January 2021
Newsela Answers Software Comming To MMC
Newsela is a reading program that teaches students with fun articles. As students read through the articles they can save big words they don't know and then go over them in flashcards. The end of each article also has a quiz that requires 4 Newsela answers to get through. These answers are quite challenging and will require alot of skill from students. But where do the articles come from? Newsela actually has a special algorithm that converts new york times and washington post articles into question answer pairs. This helps students learn from entertaining material that keeps them engaged.Miles Macdonell Collegiate 60th Anniversary Gifts
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Miles Macdonell Collegiate 60th Anniversary Celebration
For those who graduated in 1974, please visit our alumni website