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Nora Frances Henderson Secondary School

Coordinates: 43°11′28″N 79°52′01″W / 43.191°N 79.867°W / 43.191; -79.867
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Nora Frances Henderson
Address
Map
1770 Upper Sherman Avenue

, ,
L8W 0C5

Canada
Coordinates43°11′28″N 79°52′01″W / 43.191°N 79.867°W / 43.191; -79.867
Information
School typePublic, high school
MottoVeritas Omnia Vincit
(Truth conquers all)
FoundedNovember 11, 1961 (as Barton Secondary School)
September 2014 (as Nora Frances Henderson Secondary School)
School boardHamilton-Wentworth District School Board
SuperintendentLaura Romano
Area trusteeDawn Danko
School number893455[1]
PrincipalTom Fisher
Grades9–12
Enrolment≈1500 [citation needed] (September 2023 [citation needed])
LanguageEnglish
Colour(s)    Blue, Silver and White
Websitewww.hwdsb.on.ca/henderson/

Nora Frances Henderson Secondary School (NFHSS) is located at 1770 Upper Sherman Avenue in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada and is a part of the Hamilton-Wentworth District School Board. Originally opened in 1961 as Barton Secondary School, and originally located on 75 Palmer Rd., it had a September 2008 enrolment of 955.[1] Barton Secondary School’s mission statement was "Educating students to become lifelong learners and contributing citizens in a challenging, changing, multi-cultural world." Students were required by Provincial Law[2] to complete 30 mandatory credits and the Ontario Secondary School Literacy Test (OSSLT) within their secondary school career. Nora Frances Henderson Secondary School also offers special education classes as well as an ESL program. The HWDSB announced on May 24, 2012, that Barton Secondary School would be closed, along with Hill Park Secondary School and Mountain Secondary School with the students to be consolidated into a new, $25 million school.

The school was renamed Nora Frances Henderson Secondary School in September 2014, in honour of Nora-Frances Henderson, the first woman to be elected to political office in Hamilton. The original building remained in service until the new Nora Frances Henderson Secondary School was opened on October 14, 2020.[3]

In July 2018, the Hamilton-Wentworth District School Board got approval on building the new Nora Frances Henderson Secondary School. The school was designed by CS&P Architects and was built by Tambro Construction.

In August 2023, the principal of the school, according to media reports, informed parents of special entry and exit plans for students and that parents will be required to email/call before coming to the school if they wish to visit to speak to an employee.[4]

History

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Barton Secondary School in April 2013.

BSS was founded on November 11, 1961, as part of the Board of Education for the City of Hamilton's plan to have enough schools available for children of baby boomers. In 1972, the school became Hamilton's pilot school in initiating a semester system that had been showing positive increases in student achievement amongst schools in Alberta and British Columbia. Over a four-year period, results were studied and in 1976, the semester system was deemed a success and adopted by other schools in Hamilton and the surrounding area.

The school had evolved into a modern composite high school that offers a variety of academics, athletics and co-curricular activities. The school had five computer labs, a renovated gymnasium and library, a full menu cafeteria, state-of-the-art communication labs and technological shops. A Specialist High Skills Major in Manufacturing was offered at Barton. B.S.S. had over 150 courses, though not all were offered at any given time.

School specialization

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BSS took part in the Hamilton-Wentworth District School Board's Programs of Choice method that tailors learning to specific areas of interest. Barton Secondary School's focus was on the manufacturing industry and offers programs accordingly. Grade 9 and 10 students in the program were offered introductory courses in the manufacturing field, while grade 11 and 12 students had the option to specialize in the program. Barton Secondary School also provided a Cisco networking course through the Cisco Networking Academy.[5]

Incidents

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Bomb threats

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In August 2023 parents received a memo stating that a controversial teacher, Kayla Lemieux, would be joining the staff.[6] Lemieux, who stated that she was a transgender woman, had come under fire internationally for wearing extremely large prosthetic breasts that she claimed were real to her job as a shop teacher at Oakville Trafalgar High School. Oakville Trafalgar High School was subject to protests, petitions, public outbursts and a string of death and bomb threats due to the outrage towards her. In March 2023, a school spokesperson stated that Lemieux was “not currently on active assignment” but remained employed by the board. Months later she was employed by Nora Frances Henderson.

The memo informing parents of that fact said “should the school be subject to any disruptions or protests; we are committed to communicating with you as openly and as frequently as possible to ensure student safety – and to share any operational plans."[7]

There were no disruptions from the beginning of the school year to mid September, until on September 21, 2023 the school was evacuated to the football field. Students were not informed of the reason, and a routine fire drill earlier that day caused confusion until news that it was a bomb threat was posted on the Hamilton police X (Twitter) account.[8] The threat had been emailed to the school board, the police, and multiple news outlets[9] and warned of “several bombs” at Nora Frances Henderson Secondary School. It stated: “We will end your lives if you do not evacuate the school. Next time there may not be a warning."[10] Students and staff were evacuated to the nearby Ray Lewis Elementary School after multiple hours in the football field. By the mid afternoon the school was deemed safe and the remaining students there could return.

The following day on Friday, September 22, 2023 the school received another bomb threat early in the morning and evacuated around 9:10am, and the school was declared safe around 10:30 after no bomb was found,[11] but most students left the school before then.

The second email threat accused the school of “degenerate and sexually deviant behaviour from its staff members, the main degenerate of course being Kayla (Lemieux).”[10]

On the following Monday, September 25 Henderson received yet another bomb threat and was evacuated. But unlike the previous times, three other schools also received bomb threats, Saltfleet Secondary School, Highview Elementary School and Mount Albion Elementary School.[12] No bomb was found at any of the schools. There were threats made to multiple schools the next day, including one aimed at Henderson, but the school was not evacuated as no bomb had ever been found in the previous three threats, and the school had been under tighter security since.[13] Henderson received no more bomb threats afterwards.[14]

Lemieux continued to teach at Henderson and is still employed there currently. He had stopped wearing the prosthetic breasts and claiming that he was transgender since the beginning of the school year in September 2023, and is referred to as Kerry Lemieux.[15]

Notable alumni

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "Barton Secondary School". Secondary School Profile. Ontario Ministry of Education. 2010-02-18. Retrieved 2010-06-26.
  2. ^ "Ontario Schools, Kindergarten to Grade 12: Policy and Program Requirements, 2016 (OS)".
  3. ^ Leitner, Richard (6 June 2018). "Capital budget keeps faith on new Henderson high school". Hamilton Mountain News. Retrieved 13 June 2018.
  4. ^ https://www.thewhig.com/news/ontario-transgender-teacher-kayla-lemieux [bare URL]
  5. ^ "Barton Secondary". Archived from the original on 2011-05-19. Retrieved 2011-05-17.
  6. ^ "WARMINGTON: Trans teacher Lemieux returning to classroom – this time in Hamilton".
  7. ^ "Teacher with huge prosthetic breasts back in classroom".
  8. ^ https://x.com/HamiltonPolice/status/1705212829391794427
  9. ^ Reporter, Kate McCullough Spectator (2023-09-21). "Police investigating bomb threat at Hamilton high school". The Hamilton Spectator. ISSN 1189-9417. Retrieved 2024-10-19.
  10. ^ a b "- INthehammer | Local Online News". INthehammer | Hamilton, Ontario's Latest Breaking News. Retrieved 2024-10-19.
  11. ^ Reporter, Grant LaFleche Spectator (2023-10-02). "Second bomb threat in two days at Hamilton high school". The Hamilton Spectator. ISSN 1189-9417. Retrieved 2024-10-19.
  12. ^ "- INthehammer | Local Online News". INthehammer | Hamilton, Ontario's Latest Breaking News. Retrieved 2024-10-19.
  13. ^ Reporter, Kate McCullough Spectator (2023-10-02). "Why response to school bomb threats can differ from day to day". The Hamilton Spectator. ISSN 1189-9417. Retrieved 2024-10-21.
  14. ^ "Police investigate several potential bomb threats at Hamilton public schools". www.chch.com. Retrieved 2024-10-21.
  15. ^ "WARMINGTON: New school year, new look as teacher shelves Z-cup prosthetics".
  16. ^ Bryan Crawford - Toronto Argonauts Biography Archived 2011-01-05 at the Wayback Machine
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