Pickering College - Voyageur Yearbook (Newmarket, Ontario Canada)

 - Class of 1942

Page 22 of 80

 

Pickering College - Voyageur Yearbook (Newmarket, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 22 of 80
Page 22 of 80



Pickering College - Voyageur Yearbook (Newmarket, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 21
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Page 22 text:

The Voyageur lVlr. lVIcCulley, of Old Country birth and Canadian convictions, has been described as Hpredominantly non-conformist and eclectic in his religious and educational philosophyf, This may be interpreted to mean that he is a keenly aware person, alive to and eager to apply the best in any system of ideas or practices. At one time a theological student at Wyeliffe College, a graduate of the University of Toronto and the Ontario College of Edu- cation, and holding the Oxford degree of MA., a synthesis of his knowledge and ideas might be said to be achieved by his inspiring respect for and faith in the personality and potentialities of human beings, especially young' human beings. This attitude towards people is basic in Quakerism, and at the same time finds place in the theories of the Nprogressivev educators of to-day. Similarly, we had early occasion to note the Quaker emphasis on the practical in education, this is nothing more nor less than the educa- tion for lifew which is an expressed ideal of the modern Pickering College. Again, it will be recalled that there was little formal religious instruction in the early Quaker school, but that religion was traditionally regarded as an inward experience showing itself by a way of life, to-day at Pickering College the democratic way of life is studied, and the attempt is constantly made to instil into the members of the school group a sense of belonging to a co-operative community, the essentially Christian basis of this concept and all the spiritual values inherent in it are brought out by the regular Sunday evening chapel services offered by the Headmaster, members of the staff, or friends of the school. ' The continuity of theory and practice through the last hundred years is apparent also in less general ways. The activities on the farm and grounds and in the workshop of the present school would gladden the heart of Joseph John Gurney, with his belief in the dignity and usefulness of manual labour. Physical exercise is still thought to be of fundamental importance, almost without exception every student participates in a year-round athletic program which emphasizes the development of lasting skills and the value of team-work. The facilities for amental recreationi' fin the phrase of '79l, with its attendant broadening of the student's cultural experience and its enriching of classroom studies, are numerous, and best revealed by the current 4'Voyageur,, with its accounts of the place occupied in the school by music and drama, the creative arts, and interest clubs of various kinds. There is the absence in the school of superimposed, unexplained author- ity, and of artificial deference from student to master. Mr. lVlcCulley has said on occasion that 'cteaehing is relationshipv, that is, the personality of the teacher must attract or interest the student to produce the most valuable and lasting exchange of ideas between the two. Thus, the Headmaster and staff endeavour to meet the students on the basis of friendship, and such respect as is due the older from the young is genuine and knowledgeable. Once a friendly relationship has been established, as is the way of friends the world over, the student in many situations may naturally address his teacher-friend by his first name. To correct a common misapprehension, it is perhaps not out of order to emphasize that the classroom, or any formal or official school meeting, does not present a situation in which this practice is acceptable. 20

Page 21 text:

The Voyageur and Persia, but also had a reputation as Hne as it was far-reaching. The schoolis achievement was brought to a conclusive but again only temporary end by a disastrous fire which, on the last day of 1905, almost completely destroyed the buildings and its contents. The Committee lost no time in making plans for a new school. After four years of effort on its part under its generous and enthusiastic chairman. Albert S. Rogers, assisted by many Friends and well-wishers, notably Joseph A. Baker and Arthur C. Dorland who interested English Friends in the undertaking, students again entered Pickering College, a noble building beautifully situated on the outskirts of Newmarket. The first few years in Newmarket were not easy ones. The demand for this type of education had definitely declined. ln the rapidly expanding Canadian economy, a set of values stemming from the Quaker tradition appealed to a relatively limited group of people with means sufficient to make use of a private school rather than the increasingly elaborate state schools supported by tax-payers. English-style colleges and finishing schools were fashionable. The leader- ship and devotion of Dr. and Mrs. Firth, however, surmounted this and other difficulties, and had it not been for the first World War the previous success would beyond doubt have been repeated. But a different mode of service presented itself, and the school, with its land and equipment, was turned over in 1916 to the Military Hospitals Commission to be used rent free as a mental hospital as long as it was required. The plant was released by the government in 1920. For seven years the uschool on the hilli' did not function, and one might have supposed that its history as an educational institution had ended. But in the midst of the materialism and disillusionment general after the war, the great Quaker attributes of faith and vision endured. If a predominantly Quaker co-educational boarding school did not seem a practical venture, the College Board and the Society of Friends saw that a service of great signifi- cance to education generally might be performed by a private school with a freedom to experiment often lacking in more conservative foundations or government controlled institutions. A new charter was obtained for the school which left it associated with but not controlled by the Canada Yearly Meeting, the co-educational feature of the College was abandoned, since the duplicating of equipment was very costly, and finally, on the retirement of Dr. and Mrs. Firth, the Board believed that they had found in Joseph McCulley, the present Headmaster, a man who could undertake the kind of educational pioneering which the Board envisioned. A great opportunity was thus offered him and, gathering around him a group of young and enthusiastic teachers like himself, ua great experimenti' was begunfi 'Of the 1927-28 staff of the College, besides the Headmaster, Mr. Taylor Statten. Mr. R. E. K. Rourke, Mr. R. H. Perry, Mr. J. A. Maitland, and Miss F. S. Ancient are still associated with the school. In 1942, Mr. Rourke was appointed Associate Headmaster: Mr. Perry is on leave of absence, a Flight Lieutenant in the R.C.A.F.: Mr. C. R. Blackstock, Director of Health and Physical Education, and more recently Preparatory Housemaster, came to the school in 1928. 19



Page 23 text:

The Voyageur That the foregoing ideas derive from a philosophy of education capable of successful practical application is demonstrated by the progress of the school during the past fifteen years. The enrolment of about one hundred and twenty-seven students in 1941-342 is double the number of upioneersv registered in the autumn of 1927. After four years of operation, the build- ing appropriately known as Firth House was constructed, originally intended for younger boys in the lower high school grades, now the home of the flourishing new Preparatory Department. The corner-stone of Firth House was laid by Sir William Mulock, longstanding friend and regular visitor, who had performed the same ceremony a quarter of a century before when the main school was built. This growth has been matched and must in part be explained by a continuously improving academic standardg in 1941, for example, ninety percent of all honour matriculation papers written by students of the school were passed, sixty-seven percent with first and second class honours. Pickering College to-day, in spite of war and the far-reaching effects of war, is conscious of its strength and optimistic of its future. lt represents the achievement not only of those industrious and idealistic men and women who have worked in its classrooms and ofiices through the years, but also of those loyal and interested members of the College Board, who in a very real sense have Hmade everything possiblef, Dr. Dorland has demonstrated in his paper ua certain continuity both in fthe? theory and practicev of the school for the past hundred years. Of equal interest is the part played by the Rogers family for the last sixty years in the development of the school. It will suffice to note that the present Chairman and Treasurer of the school. lt will suffice to note that the present Chairman and Treasurer of the Board, Samuel Rogers, K.C., is the grandson of that Mr. Samuel Rogers whose name we have noted in connection with the first Pickering College and its re-opening in 1891. This continuity of personnel has doubt- less helped to keep unbroken the continuity of philosophy mentioned, and has been of inestimable value. A remark current in the school this past term has been, '6We,re through the first hundred years,', and history justifies the implication. No better conclusion to these notes could be found than the school motto: Bene provisa principia ponantur. MA new soul wakes with each awakened year. The valiant soul is still the same, the sarne The strength, the art, the inevitable grace. The thirst unquenched for fame . . . The long obedience, and the knightly flame Of loyalty to honour and a name. --SANTAYANA 21

Suggestions in the Pickering College - Voyageur Yearbook (Newmarket, Ontario Canada) collection:

Pickering College - Voyageur Yearbook (Newmarket, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 1

1939

Pickering College - Voyageur Yearbook (Newmarket, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

Pickering College - Voyageur Yearbook (Newmarket, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

1941

Pickering College - Voyageur Yearbook (Newmarket, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

1943

Pickering College - Voyageur Yearbook (Newmarket, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944

Pickering College - Voyageur Yearbook (Newmarket, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1945 Edition, Page 1

1945

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