Sacred Heart Catholic High School (Newmarket)

Coordinates: 44°3′29″N 79°26′24″W / 44.05806°N 79.44000°W / 44.05806; -79.44000
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Sacred Heart Catholic High School
Sacred Heart is located in Ontario
Sacred Heart
Sacred Heart
Sacred Heart (Ontario)
Address
Map
908 Lemar Road

,
Canada
Information
School typeHigh school
Motto"A community called to share in the development of the whole person"
Religious affiliation(s)Roman Catholic
Founded1979
School boardYork Catholic District School Board
SuperintendentJoel Chiutsi
Area trusteeTheresa McNicol
PrincipalDonato Anthony Dilallo
Grades9-12
Enrolment1188 (2020) [1]
LanguageEnglish
Colour(s)Maroon and Grey
MascotCorky the Crusader
Websitehttp://sahe.ycdsb.ca/

Sacred Heart Catholic High School is a public Catholic high school in Newmarket, Ontario, Canada. It is currently the only high school in Newmarket under the jurisdiction of the York Catholic District School Board. There were 1620 full-time registered students for the 2005/2006 year, 95 full-time staff members, and 24 support staff.

History[edit]

In January 1969, the York Region Separate School Board came into existence with the combining of eleven small school boards. Shortly thereafter, the Board passed a motion to Catholic High Schools in Toronto. At their next meeting, trustees faced a parents' delegation protesting the decision. This delegation, in convincing the Board to reverse its stand, showed that support for the concept of Catholic education beyond elementary school was strong.

Thus, the Board carried on the tradition of Catholic education and continued to transport students to Catholic high schools in Metropolitan Toronto. In 1973, the Metro Separate School Board declared that these students could no longer be accommodated. Therefore, in 1974, the York Separate School Board decided to establish St. Robert Catholic High School in Thornhill, Ontario. In doing so, the Board made a statement that a second junior high school would be built north of Toronto at a future date "if the extension of Catholic education is supported by the Catholic community of York Region".

St. Robert was a tremendous success and after four years was filled to capacity. The Board, therefore, opened the doors of Sacred Heart Junior High School in September 1979, providing 265 students with a Grades 7 to 9 program. Through the cooperative efforts of the Board and the Toronto Archdiocese High School Commission, Grade 11 was introduced in September 1981 and one grade was added each subsequent year.

Simultaneously, a building program was undertaken and updated new facilities were made available to students in September 1983. The student population continued to increase and a new addition to the building was opened in May 1987.

The Catholic School Council in conjunction with staff and students continue to seek improvements to the school. In 2002 two new additions were added which gave the school a new cafeteria, upgraded physical education equipment and facilities, an expanded library resource centre, a theatre/lecture hall, new administrative offices as well as guidance and special education additions.

Another major renovation took place in the summer of 2004. The entire second floor of the old wing received new Science Labs and Art Rooms.

Sports and athletics[edit]

Sacred Heart Catholic High School's sports teams are known as the Crusaders. The school's mascot is Corky, a stylized knight who is known for his playful and sometimes silly attitude while attending Crusader home games.

Sacred Heart competes in a variety of different sports including:

The 2020 Athletic award Winners were announced in May, some of the Junior winners are:

Nolan Verboomen - Junior Boys Golf MVP Presented by: M. Woodrow, M. West and S. Zeagmen

Jeremy Riding - Junior Boys Basketball MVP Presented by: J. Scott

Grace Jean - Girls Basketball MVP Presented by: R. Imgrund

Dylan Campos - Junior Boys soccer MVP Presented by D. Quattitrochi and L. Vos

William Forhan - Junior Boys AOTY Presented by J. Scott

Katie Newman - Junior Girls AOTY Presented by R. Imgrund

School involvement[edit]

Sacred Heart has always been an active contributor to the local community. Every year, the school gets involved with many fundraising and charitable organizations.

Throughout the past few years, Sacred Heart has participated biannually in the Canadian Cancer Society's biggest fundraiser, Relay For Life. The school has been very successful each time they have participated and are among the top schools in the country. Since 2009, they have raised over $550,000 for cancer research. In the spring of 2012, Sacred Heart's students' raised over $150,000, the highest amount ever raised by any high school in Canada.[2] The graduating class were featured on a CTV News broadcast. They raised $143,000 in 2014. Led by Aaron Zhang in 2016, the students raised over $186,000, setting both a personal and Canada-wide record yet again.[3]

Clubs and activities[edit]

Some of Sacred Heart's many clubs, groups, teams, and councils include:

  • Anime Club
  • Arts Council
  • Athletic Council
  • Best Buddies
  • Choir
  • Coding Club
  • Concert Band
  • Dance Club
  • DECA
  • Environmental Council
  • Equity/Anti-Black Racism
  • ESL Ambassador's Club
  • Games Club
  • Jazz Band
  • Model UN at Sacred
  • Multicultural Cooking and Culture Club
  • Music Council
  • Presidents' Council
  • REACH For The Top
  • SAGA (Sexuality and Gender Acceptance) Club
  • SMASH (Student Mentors at Sacred Heart)
  • Sacred Beat (Newspaper Club)
  • Sacred Minds (Mental Health Council)
  • Sacred Reads
  • Sacred Rock Pile/Jamnation
  • Sacred Tech Team
  • Spirit Council
  • String Ensemble
  • Student Council
  • Ted-Ed Student Club

Famous alumni[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Enrolment Information" (PDF). York Catholic District School Board. p. 3. Retrieved 2021-12-31.
  2. ^ Saccone, Rose; LeBlanc, Kathy (22 June 2012). "Newmarket's Sacred Heart Relay For Life tops in Canada". Aurora Banner (Press release). Retrieved 1 May 2015.
  3. ^ "Newmarket's Sacred Heart school raised over $186,000 for cancer research". York Catholic District School Board. Retrieved January 17, 2017.

Sources[edit]

External links[edit]

44°3′29″N 79°26′24″W / 44.05806°N 79.44000°W / 44.05806; -79.44000