Northern Secondary School | |
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Address | |
851 Mount Pleasant Road Toronto, Ontario, M4P 2L5 Canada |
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Coordinates | 43°42′38.17″N 79°23′24.42″W / 43.7106028°N 79.3901167°WCoordinates: 43°42′38.17″N 79°23′24.42″W / 43.7106028°N 79.3901167°W |
Information | |
School type | Public high school |
Motto | The Pride, The Spirit. "Hail Dear Old Northern" |
Founded | September 1930 |
School board | Toronto District School Board |
Superintendent | Sandra Tondat |
Area trustee | Shelly Laskin |
School number | 930768 |
Principal | Ron Felsen |
Grades | 9-12 |
Enrollment | 1,806 (Fall 2016) |
Colour(s) | Red, Gold, and Blue |
Mascot | Red Knight |
Team name | Red Knights |
Website | www |
Northern Secondary School is a public high school in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It teaches grades 9 through 12. It is a part of the Toronto District School Board (TDSB). Prior to Amalgamation of Toronto in 1998, it was within the Toronto Board of Education (TBE). The closest TTC subway station is Eglinton.
Northern has long-standing rivalries with nearby high-school North Toronto Collegiate Institute and also with Central Technical School, Lawrence Park Collegiate Institute and Leaside High School.
Founded in 1930, it was originally known as Northern Vocational School, until the twenty-fifth anniversary when the name was changed to Northern Technical-Commercial, which lasted for three years until the present name, Northern Secondary School, came into use because a definite district had been assigned for matriculation students.
Northern was the first Ontario school to have a student council. The school is a pilot site of a Toronto Police Service program that places on-duty police officers in schools.
Northern Secondary is built in the Gothic Collegiate style, has a floor space of about 121,317 square feet and contains one hundred and fifteen rooms. C.E.C. Dyson was the school's original architect. Although little is known about him, he was the school board's architect from 1921 until 1949. Northern is known for the grotesques which exist on the exterior, throughout the entrance foyer and inside the auditorium.
Further evidence of the Gothic Collegiate style can be found in the vaulted ceilings of the hallways, and the arched doorways and windows featured throughout the building. As stated on a plaque inside the main entrance, during the 60s a major addition was built which significantly altered the rear of the school. These renovations changed little about the original parts of the building. Although once grand, over the decades, the facility has fallen into considerable disrepair and is in need of extensive renovation.