The History of Sacred Heart School
Before Sacred Heart School was built, the
catholic children of the area had to travel many miles to attend school. The
English girls had to attend St. Columban’s Girl’s school located at the corner
of Fourth and Augustus Street. The English boys had to attend the center Ward
school at the corner of Fourth and Adolphus Street. The French children of the
area had a much further distance to travel. They had to attend Nativity School
on the corner of Montreal road and Edward Street. All of the children who
attended school had another choice however. They could attend the Tollgate
Public School, which was located on Tollgate Road east of Pitt Street. This
school is located near the present day Blessed Sacrament Church.
The Catholic parents of this area wanted to
have a school of their own for their children. They formed a committee, raised
some
money and for the sum of $12000,
purchased the South half of lot #10
from a farmer, Herbert Gallinger. A school board was formed which was
called the Roman Catholic School Board #8.
The organizing
committee was comprised of the following people
Original School (Photo provided by
Gerald & Doreen Roy 1948)
Rev. H.A. Poirier, Pastor St. Jean Bosco Parish.
Mr. Clovis Roy
Mr. Jos. Murphy
Mr. Albert Aubin
Mr. Nelson (Sis) Larin
Mr. Omer Boileau
Mrs. Viola Roy Recording secretary.
These people were also the first elected trustees for Sacred Heart School, as each school at this time formed its own board.
They contacted a building contractor, Derouin
Construction Company. This company built the original school, which was
completed in 1945. It was given the name Sacred Heart School. The sisters of the
Sacred Heart Order were requested to staff the school with teachers. They
accepted the request and the school was opened to the Catholic children of this
area. It was a bilingual school. Two of the know school board members were a Mr.
Robinson and Mr. Hector Gervais. Mr. Gervais later worked as a maintenance
electrician with the school board.

View looking South from Fifteenth
Street.. (Photo supplied by Robert Kitchener)
In 1949 more land was purchased from the Church
of England for expansion. Because of a high enrollment an addition was added to
the original school. Then in 1955 another addition was made to these
buildings.
In 1956 the English parents of this area
wished to have their own school. The French section then purchased property on
Sunnyside Avenue and built their own school. It was called St. Gabriel School.
Between 1956 and 1957 the change over was made. The French children moved to St.
Gabriel School and the English children remained at Sacred Heart School. In 1959
the Cornwall Separate School board took over the management of approximately
thirteen small school boards in the area. The board, which operated Sacred Heart
School, was included in this reorganization. In 1969 the school board was
reorganized again to include Lancaster, Alexandria, Chesterville, Iroquois and
all Catholic schools in the city of Cornwall.
Because of many families moving into this
area there arose a need for a much larger building at Sacred Heart School. In
1963 a new wing was added to the three older buildings. On September
8th 1964 the new addition was opened and on October 28, 1964 it was
blessed by Bishop Plourd. In order to build this new addition, the school board
had to purchase two properties to the South of the old school. These properties
were purchased from Mr. Amelott and a Mr. Lapierre. The cost of the new
structure was $888,000. Noel Couture was the local building contractor who
completed the job. In 1994 two permanent portable classrooms were added to the
northwest corner of the school. They were joined to the main building with a
hallway. The exterior of the older parts of the school were covered with steel
siding and new windows were added. The hallways in this older section were all
resurfaced.

In the beginning the school was a Kindergarten
to Grade eight school. Until Bishop Macdonell opened, Sacred Heart remained such
a mix. With the opening of Bishop Macdonell in 1967 it became a Kindergarten to
grade six school. It remained so until the board repatriated the grade seven and
eight student to their home school in 1985.
During the 60’ and 70’s Sacred heart
School boasted many wonderful sports teams. The opening of school in September
was
the advent of the tackle football season.
Students from Grade 2 to grade 6 took part in
an organized tackle football league. Uniforms were old cast off jerseys donated
by the Cornwall minor hockey system. The only condition was that we remove the
logo on the front of the shirts as had been requested by the sponsors. The best
of the shirts were reserved for the traveling school team. A contest was held
and a logo designed by Billy Filion.
Thus
the
Sacred Heart Beavers were born.
The referee squad was made up of responsible
grade 6 students.
After school a team of grade 5 and 6 students
competed against several other schools in the board with a champion being
declared each year. In 1977 Stewart Baker, owner of the Squire shop purchased
the school a set of modern Sweaters for the football and hockey teams. In
appreciation the team was renamed the Sacred Heart Squires. Many years later the
school team was renamed the Sacred Heart Hornets, a name they still go by today.
Several other sports were played through out
the year following the same format. Ice hockey for the boys and broomball for
girls were very popular winter activities. Also in early spring mixed floor
hockey took over the students interest. Later in spring Softball and Lacrosse were the sports of great
interest. 

Come spring the various winning teams of each
sport were awarded trophies. In the beginning the trophy’s were made from
javex
bottles and handy items. With the arrival of a Mr. Menard trophy day took on a
whole new meaning. He had several trophys rebuilt from cast off bowling
treasures. Ex royal hockey players, home from their NHL teams, were invited to
present the hardware. Billy Smith of the New York Islanders and Richard Brodeur from the Vancouver
Canucks were two of the players who
graciously accepted the invitation. Bob Kilger, an NHL referee at the
time, also presented the trophies one year.That day always held a great deal
of
anticipation for the young athletes regardless of who the presenter happened to
be.
In the middle sixties the teachers and parents
built a rink with high boards and lights in the back yard. This rink was the
focal point for the neighbourhood students well into the evening.
The
lights were on a timer and stayed on until 9:30 every evening. During the school
week every Wednesday afternoon was free skating at Sacred Heart School. Rink
building was a cold task and one that required an innovative technique. A Mr.
Daigle and a Mr.Ouimet decided one
cold evening to get a head start on the rink for the following day. Their plan
was to fasten the two inch fire hose to the light pole, aim the water at the
rink and head home for a cozy evening. Much to their dismay when they arrived
early for work the next morning they found the city crews busy at work blocking
off the surrounding Streets. The hose had flooded the streets and was creating a
traffic hazard. So much for easy rink building. In early November the halls in
the older section of the school were covered with a carpet and benches were
lined along all of the walls. Then right after lunch on Wednesdays
the
whole school, students, teachers and principal donned their skates and headed
out to the rink for an afternoon of exercise and fun. Older students always
helped tie skates for the little ones.
Another great school adventure during these
years was the annual summer Field Day at Woodlands beach. Seven or eight yellow
school buses would transport the whole school to the beach for a day of
competitive activities. Parents and teachers would score each activity and
winning teams would be
declared at the end of the day. Grade 6
students acted as the captains and teams were made up of Kindergarten to grade
six students.
With the arrival of Sister Ruth Vaughn in the 70’s a folk group was formed. Cable eleven, the local TV provider, was putting together a one hour program on the church folk groups in the city. She gathered together a group of interested students, convinced Mr. Ouimet to come along and play his guitar and got one song ready for the taping. When the show was over she wondered if perhaps the group could do a mass for the congregation at Blessed Sacrament Church. The pastor at the time, Father McPhail, thought it was a great idea. The group played for the 7:30 mass on Saturday night for the next thirteen years. They would practice twice a week at the school and as the years went by, interested students were given guitar lessons and when playing well enough would join the folk group as instrumentalist. At various times the
group boasted ten or more guitar players.

During the seventies another interesting
project took shape at Sacred Heart School. Shortly after the rink started to
melt and the Wednesday free skating ended option day would begin. For an
eight-week period in the winter the grade three to six students signed up for an
option of their choice.
Once
a week for two hours, they would go to the option of their choice to learn a
skill provided by teachers and parents. They could choose from a variety of
different classes. Woodworking, sewing, knitting, aerobics, chess, guitar,
electronics, singing, painting, stamp collecting, model building, arts and
crafts, bridge etc. Teachers and students looked forward to these afternoons
eagerly.
Sacred Heart also was proud of the cheerleading
team. Under the supervision of Miss
Henderson, a team of grade six girls practiced their routines and then
accompanied the school teams on their road games. They usually created a stir as
they were
the
only school with a cheerleading team that followed the boys school team.
During Holy week a series of plays were always
performed. The older grades preformed a series of five plays. Palm Sunday, The
last supper, The Garden The Crucufuxation and the Resurrection. This time of
reverence and remembering was very special.
Principals
Vice
Principals
Sister Saint Alice
Mrs. Natalie Cameron
Sister Emma Lefebvre
Mrs. Stephanie King
Sister Marie Berthe Carriere
Sylvie Bedard
Mr. Leslie McCormick
Miss Francis Spagnolo
Mrs. Gertrude Johnson
Mr. Norman Daigle
Sister Ruth Vaughn
Mr. Ray Barnes
Mr. Pat
Valliquette
Mr. Joe Meehan
Mrs. Stephanie King
With the return of the grade seven and eight
students in 1985 the character of the school changed. Single day tournaments replaced the All Star Traveling teams of the early years.Holiday dances became a very popular way of
celebrating special days. Fifty-eight years after opening, Sacred Heart is a kindergarten to grade eight school with an enrollment of 390 students. Hundreds of children from the neighbourhood owe their wonderful foundation to the dedicated and caring staff members that have staffed Sacred Heart School for so many years. Stephanie Burke, the present principal says, "I believe a distinctive Catholic Education involves the partnership betwen home, school and parish. Through the teachings of Christ, we promote a learning environment that fosters peace, hope patience and understanding." Sacred Heart has been a cornerstone of the North end for fifty-eight years.