2008 (50th) Anniversary of the 1958 McCurdy School, S.S. No. 8, Closing - School Photos 1950 to 1958 Handout
Description
- Media Type
- Text
- Image
- Item Type
- Documents
- Description
- Several years of committee work cumulated on April 5, 2008 at a celebratory reunion in Milton's Heritage Country Park when former pupils and teachers of S.S. No. 8, McCurdy School gathered to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the closing of the school in 1958.
Attendees at the celebration received five outstanding pdfs prepared by the committee which clearly show their careful research, authoritative information and professional author and editorial capabilities. The five documents provide a history of the school, a listing with information and some photographs of the school teachers, and three documents with class photos including identification of the teachers and students when known.
All five documents are in the TTHS print archives. Only the class photo documents are included in our internet collection as these photos came from personal copies and are no longer copyright. The "History" document and the "Teachers" document contain some newspaper articles that are copyright so not uploaded into our internet collection.
The oldest school photo found by the 2008 Anniversary committee is the first shown in this record, from 1893.
To view all 13 pdf pages here, you can either download the pdf or click on "Pages" - both below the photograph you see on the right.
The school photos in this record include: 1955-56, 1956-1957, June 1958, 1957-1958, 1958. The students and teachers are identified and named. - Notes
- In 1823, there was a great need for a school in the north east area of the Township of Trafalgar, Halton County. Land on the north side of Derry Road, backing onto the farm of the Richard Askin family, just west of Ninth Line was donated. The farms of Joseph Mason, John Cordingly and Byard McCurdy lay on the other sides of the site and intersection. Other area family men involved were Hugh Mason, Jno. Bussell, Isaac Askin, Robert McCurdy, David Cordingly, Bartholomew O'Connor, Adam Anderson, Jno. Anderson and Patrick McCartin.
A 1969 Georgetown Herald item says that the school name was chosen by drawing one name of the families on all the sides from a hat. This article also says the school had the nickname, "the little red schoolhouse" and later, "McCurdy Public School of the Ninth Line".
60 children were registered in 1823. When it was closed, 27 pupils were attending. They moved to a new eight room public school in Drumquin.
Between 1950 and 1970, Ontario school boards centralized the public schools in their jurisdictions. The old one or two room "S.S" (School Section) schools were closed as centralized, multi-roomed modern schools were built. - Subject(s)
- Personal Name(s)
- Askin was sometimes "Asking". Cordinby also "Cordingley" "Cordinly".
- Local identifier
- TTMBNK000958
- Collection
- Trafalgar Township Historical Society
- Language of Item
- English
- Geographic Coverage
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Ontario, Canada
Latitude: 43.5697022355376 Longitude: -79.7928064602661
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- Copyright Statement
- Copyright status unknown. Responsibility for determining the copyright status and any use rests exclusively with the user.
- Recommended Citation
- 2008 (50th) Anniversary of the 1958 McCurdy School, S.S. No. 8, Closing - School Photos 1950 to 1958 Handout
- Contact
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Trafalgar Township Historical Society Sponsor: Jeff Knoll, Local & Regional Councillor for Oakville Ward 5 – Town of Oakville/Regional Municipality of Halton