Immaculata High School is a Roman Catholic high school in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, operated by the Ottawa Catholic School Board. It is currently located along the Rideau Canal in Old Ottawa East neighbourhood of Ottawa. Like other Catholic schools, it is publicly funded under the Ontario school system.
History
thumb|250px|left|Immaculata High School
Immaculata High School was founded as an all-girls school in 1928 by Reverend J.J. O’Gorman, acting under the advice of higher ecclesiastical authority. He named the school "Immaculata", and opened it with an initial enrollment of 85 run by a staff of 3 Grey Sisters as an alternative to public school education for girls of moderate income located at 211 Bronson Avenue. The girls paid a monthly fee of one dollar — if their families could afford it.
The site for the new school was the former Christie mansion property on Bronson Avenue at the corner of Lisgar Street, which was purchased for $25,000. W.E. Noffke, a well-known Ottawa architect, designed the school with eight classrooms, a science lab, a home economics classroom, a gymnasium and a stage area, and office space. A passageway linked the school to the former Christie mansion, which became the first convent home for the Grey Sisters who taught at the school. During the construction of the school building, the students of the newly formed Immaculata High School attended classes at St. Patrick’s Home, at the corner of Laurier Avenue and Kent Street. Sister Loyola was the first principal and the teachers were Sister Agnes of the Sacred Heart and Sister St. Geraldine. The school's sports team is the Immaculata Saints, and the school mascot is the saint bernard 'Bernie Mac'.
Principals
All of the Sisters who were principals were Grey Sisters of the Immaculate Conception:
- Sister Loyola (1928) (while students attended classes at St. Patrick’s Home)
- Sister Agnes of the Sacred Heart (1928–1935) (first principal at Bronson Avenue site)
- Sister Patrice Thompson (1935–1937)
- Sister Darina Fackelman (1937–1941)
- Sister Thomas Tremblay (1941–54)
- Sister Cormickie Holland (1954–1967)
- Sister Lucille Martin (1967–70)
- Sister Anna Clare (1970–75 and 1976–82)
- Sister Anne O’Brien (1975–76)
- Sister Theresa Kelly (1982–87)
- James J. Shea (1987–89)
- Mary Durst (1989–95)
- Evelyn Kelly (1989 (acting) and 1995–1999)
- Bernard Swords (1999–2002)
- Denise Andre (2002–03)
- Thomas D’Amico (2003–2010)
