La Verendrye School
290 Lilac St.
Sat May 22
2004
By Reid Dickie
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YOU have to imagine Winnipeg in its boomtown days, 1900 to
1920. The population grew by thousands every month. Immigrants from all over the
world converged here. In two decades of bustle that changed a floodplain into a
city, 40 schools were built to educate all those new Canadian children.
One of
Winnipeg's grand old schools from the boomtown era is La Verendrye School.
Though residential and business areas quickly grew up around it, when it opened
in 1909, La Verendrye was on the outskirts of the city.
On the school's
cornerstone laying, the Manitoba Free Press reported, "Nearby
dwellings are hidden in areas of native bush."
Centred
perfectly between Jessie and Warsaw on Lilac Street, the school's location takes
full advantage of having an empty square block without competing buildings.
Based on a design by chief school architect J.B. Mitchell and constructed of
local materials, La Verendrye School is a commingling of Queen Anne, Romanesque
Revival and Neo-Georgian architectural styles. Its exterior is dun-coloured
brick with Tyndall stone trim set on a raised limestone foundation. The cut
stone balustrade and pilaster features of the entrance porch enhance its style.
Mitchell's
objectives were student safety and adequate natural lighting. The corridors are
wide with plenty of exits, and large windows flood the classrooms with light.
Though not the originals, the façade features leaded stained glass windows.
Most of the
rooms still have original pressed tin ceilings. The initial cost to construct
the school was about $81,000. Operated as a high school
for two years, La Verendrye became an elementary school to handle the overflow
from Fort Rouge School. Today, La Verendrye is the oldest school in the division
continuously used for students.
The gym was
added onto the south side in 1964, a benefit to students that unfortunately
precluded the building from being named a heritage site. In the late 1980s, the
school was saved from demolition by an area parents' group.
Named after
early Quebec explorer, Pierre Gaultier de Verennes, La Verendrye School is one
of a handful of early schools not named after stalwarts of the British Empire.
Since 1983, the school has offered French immersion classes for nursery to Grade
6 students. Today almost 200 students attend École La Verendrye, the only
elementary French immersion milieu school in south Winnipeg.
The centennial
of La Verendrye School occurs in 2009.
To prepare, the
school is involved in a major history project. They are setting up a historical
classroom, as it would have appeared in the early 1900s, complete with teaching
aids of the era.
Former alumni
are sharing memories and stories about their La Verendrye days. If this is your
old school and you'd like to volunteer or contribute to the centennial
activities, the staff encourages you to get in touch.
This Old
School is an itinerant look at some of the city's places of learning by Winnipeg
writer Reid Dickie.
Reprinted
with the permission of the Winnipeg Free Press.