Victoria University, Toronto
File:Vic-Crest-2022.png | |
Former names | Upper Canada Academy (1836–1841) Victoria College (1841–1884) |
---|---|
Motto | Abeunt studia in mores |
Motto in English | Studies pass into character |
Established | October 12, 1836 |
Parent institution | University of Toronto |
Endowment | C$523.9 million (2021)[1] |
Chancellor | Nick Saul |
President | Rhonda N. McEwen |
Principal | Angela Esterhammer (Victoria College), HyeRan Kim-Cragg (Emmanuel College) |
Undergraduates | 3,475 (2021)[2] |
Location | Toronto, Ontario, Canada |
Mascot | Lion |
Website | www |
Victoria University is a federated college of the University of Toronto, founded in 1836 and named in honour of Queen Victoria. It is commonly called Victoria College, informally Vic, after the original academic component that now forms its undergraduate division. Since 1928, Victoria College has retained secular studies in the liberal arts and sciences while Emmanuel College has functioned as its postgraduate theological college. Victoria operated as an independent institution until its federation with the University of Toronto in 1890, relocating from Cobourg to Toronto.[3]
Victoria is situated in the northeastern part of the university campus, adjacent to St. Michael's College and Queen's Park. Among its residential halls is Annesley Hall, a National Historic Site of Canada. A major centre for Reformation and Renaissance studies, Victoria is home to international scholarly projects and holdings devoted to pre-Puritan English drama and the works of Desiderius Erasmus.
History
Victoria College was founded as the Upper Canada Academy by the Wesleyan Methodist Church. In 1831, a church committee decided to locate the academy on four acres (1.6 hectares) of land in Cobourg, Ontario, east of Toronto, because of its central location in a large town and access by land and water. In 1836, Egerton Ryerson received a royal charter for the institution from King William IV in England, while the Upper Canadian government was hesitant to provide a charter to a Methodist institution. This was the first charter ever granted by the British Government to a Nonconformist body for an educational institution.[4] The school officially opened to male and female students on October 12, 1836, with Matthew Richey as principal.[5] Although the school taught a variety of liberal arts subjects, it also functioned as an unofficial Methodist seminary. In 1841, it was incorporated as Victoria College, named in honour of Queen Victoria, and finally received a charter from the Upper Canadian Legislature.[6]
Victoria University formed in 1884 with the merger of Victoria College and Albert College in Belleville. In 1890, due to financial and geographic difficulties, Victoria University federated with the University of Toronto. In 1892, Victoria University moved from Cobourg to its current campus on Queen's Park Crescent, south of Bloor Street (at Charles Street West), in Toronto.
A plaque was erected at 100 University Avenue at the intersection with College Street in Cobourg, Ontario.
Victoria College The cornerstone of this building was laid June 7, 1832, and teaching began in 1836. First operated under a royal charter by the Wesleyan Methodists as Upper Canada Academy, in 1841 it obtained a provincial charter under the name of Victoria College, giving it power to grant degrees. Victoria's first president was the Reverend Egerton Ryerson, newspaper editor and founder of Ontario's present educational system. In 1890 the college federated with the University of Toronto and, in 1892, left Cobourg.
James Loudon, a former president of the federated universities, had prohibited dancing at the University of Toronto until 1896. However, dancing at Victoria was not officially permissible until thirty years later, in 1926.
King George V gifted to Victoria College a silver cup used by Queen Victoria when she was a child and the Royal Standard that had flown at Osborne House and was draped on the coffin of the Queen when she died there in 1901.[7]
Two bronze plaques on either side of the South door of Victoria College were erected as memorials dedicated to the students of Victoria College who lost their lives in the First and Second World Wars. The WWI list of honour was erected by the Alumni and Alumnae Associations on October 13, 1923, while the WWII list of honour was erected by the Board of Regents.[8]
In 1928, the independent Union College federated with the theology department of Victoria College, and became Emmanuel College.
On the Old Ontario Strand for piano by Joyce Belyea was published for the Victoria College Music Club between 1946 and 1948 by the J.H. Peel Music Pub. Co. in Toronto.[9]
Sites and architecture
Victoria College is somewhat separated from the rest of the University of Toronto geographically, bordering Queen's Park, and being located on the eastern portion of the campus along with St. Michael's College. The main building, Old Vic, an example of Richardsonian Romanesque architectural style, was built in 1891. The architect was W. G. Storm, who died shortly after completion. The campus is centred on the main quadrangle of Victoria, outlined by the upper and lower houses of Burwash Hall.
The oldest residence building at Victoria is Annesley Hall. Built in 1903 and renovated in 1988, it is a National Historic Site of Canada located across from the Royal Ontario Museum. Annesley Hall was the first residence built specifically for women in Canada.
Burwash Hall is the second oldest of the residence buildings at Victoria. Construction began in 1911 and was completed in 1913. It was named after Nathanael Burwash, a former president of Victoria. The building is an extravagant Neo-Gothic work with turrets, gargoyles, and battlements. The architect was Henry Sproatt.
The building is divided between the large dining hall in the northwest and the student residence proper. The residence area is divided into two sections. The Upper Houses, built in 1913, consist of four houses: North House, Middle House, Gate House, and South House. The Lower Houses were built in 1931 and were originally intended to house theology students at Emmanuel College, whose current building was opened the same year. First House, Nelles House, Caven House, Bowles-Gandier House are now mostly home to undergraduate arts and science students. The latter two are mostly reserved for students in the Vic One Programme.
To the west the Upper Houses look out on the Vic Quad and the main Victoria College building across it. West of the Lower Houses is the new Lester B. Pearson Garden of Peace and International Understanding and the E.J. Pratt Library beyond it. From the eastern side of the building, the Upper Houses look out at Rowell Jackman Hall and the Lower Houses see the St. Michael's College residence of Elmsley. The only exceptions are the view from Gate House's tower that looks down St. Mary's Street and the view from the south side of Bowles-Gandier house, which looks upon the main quadrangle of St. Michael's University College.
Rowell Jackman Hall, is the newest of Vic's residences, having been completed in 1993. It is named after Mary Rowell Jackman whose son Hal Jackman made a substantial donation to the project. It stands just to the east of Burwash Hall on Charles St. and is west of St. Michael's College Loretto College. Before Rowell Jackman Hall was built, the site was home to a parking lot and the historic Stephenson House. Prior to construction Stephenson House was moved to a new location further east on Charles St. The building's construction caused some controversy as it greatly disrupted life in Burwash.
Margaret Addison Hall is a seven-floor co-ed residence across Charles St. from Burwash Hall, between the Goldring Student Centre and the Victoria sports field.
E.J. Pratt Library is the main library of Victoria University.[10] It was built in 1961 and is located at the south end of the quadrangle. The site of the library and the adjacent Northrop Frye Building was originally on the route of Queen's Park Crescent. The road was pushed south into Queen's Park to make way for the new buildings.[citation needed]
Academics and organization
Victoria University is governed bicamerally by the Victoria University Board of Regents and the Victoria University Senate. These bodies are represented by faculty, administrators, elected students and alumni. The colleges are governed by the Victoria College Council and Emmanuel College Council. College councils are represented by faculty, administrators and elected and appointed students. Victoria's governing charter was most recently amended in 1981, with the enactment of the Victoria University Act.[11]
Victoria is presently the wealthiest college at the University of Toronto by net assets. In part this has been because of alumni donations, but much of the growth is specifically due to the rapidly increasing value of Victoria's large real estate holdings in downtown Toronto. Today, the college has a securities portfolio worth approximately $78 million and a real estate portfolio worth $80 million.[12]
The E.J. Pratt Library is the main library for Victoria College. The collection of approximately 250,000 volumes is geared towards the undergraduate programs at Vic and contains mainly humanities texts with a focus on History, English, Philosophy.[10] The library also hosts rich archival special collections from notable alumni and faculty, historical figures, specific literary collections and Canadiana.[13] The library also oversees Victoria University's institutional archives.[14] The Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies is located within the E.J. Pratt Library. Its holdings fall into three main categories: rare books, most of which were printed before 1700 (currently about 4,000 titles), modern books and microforms (several thousand microfiches and reels). The library contains primary and secondary materials relating to virtually every aspect of the Renaissance and Reformation. In particular, it houses the Erasmus collection, one of the richest resources in North America for the study of works written or edited by the great Dutch humanist Desiderius Erasmus of Rotterdam. The collection holds a substantial number of pre-1700 editions of his works, including the Novum Instrumentum of 1516.
The academic programs of the college include Literary Studies, Semiotics and Communication Theory, Renaissance Studies, the Vic Concurrent Teacher Education Program (developed in conjunction with OISE/UT) and the first-year undergraduate programs Vic One and Vic First Pathways.[15]
Centre for Reformation and Renaissance Studies (CRRS) is a research and teaching centre in Victoria University devoted to the study of the period from approximately 1350 to 1700. The CRRS supervises an undergraduate program in Renaissance Studies, organizes lectures and seminars, and maintains an active series of publications. The centre also offers undergraduate, graduate, and postdoctoral fellowships. From 1976 to 2009, the performance history research and publishing project Records of Early English Drama (REED) was based at Victoria University.
Student life
Campus life for Victoria students is active and varied. Victoria College has levy receivers, student organizations that directly receive a fixed amount of funding from students every year, as well as clubs whose funding are overseen by the Victoria University Students' Administrative Council (VUSAC). Prominent clubs include The Boundary (the college's satire paper),[16] the Environmental Fashion Show, Vic Dance and the Victoria College Chorus.[17]
Levy receivers are students groups with special status based on providing an essential service for student life, and levy heads are also assessor members in VUSAC. Victoria's eleven levy receivers are:[18]
- Acta Victoriana, the college literary journal.
- Victoria College Drama Society (VCDS), which runs at least four shows per year[citation needed] (a fall show, a winter show, a submission to the University of Toronto Drama Festival, and a musical)
- The Strand, Vic's student-run newspaper that is distributed fortnightly across the University of Toronto's downtown campus.
- Victoria College Athletics Association (VCAA), which provides students with a chance to participate and compete in intramural sports.
- The Cat's Eye, a student lounge in the Goldring Student Centre building that is often used to hold events.
- WUSC, which sponsors a student from a developing country to come to the University of Toronto.
- Caffiends, Vic's student-run fair trade organic cafe.
- VicPride!, an LGBTQ organization that strives to create a safe space at Victoria.
- Student Projects, a fund available to students to finance projects that will enrich student life.
- VicXposure, a photography group offering workshops, equipment rentals and darkroom use.
- VISA, the Victoria International Students Association.
Victoria is also home to the Isabel Bader Theatre, opened in March 2001. During the past few years the theatre has been used as a lecture hall for University of Toronto students, an active learning space for Victoria University students groups, numerous concerts, film screenings, conferences, and theatrical productions, including the annual sophomore tradition launched in 1872, The Bob Comedy Revue, each written, directed, produced and performed by students such as Lester B. Pearson, Norman Jewison, E. J. Pratt, Northrop Frye, and Margaret Atwood.[19]
Residential halls and houses
Annesley Hall is the all-female residence at Victoria College. Annesley Hall is the first university residence built for women in Canada.[20]
Burwash Hall residences consist of the Upper and Lower Houses, each type differing slightly in their layout. The Upper Houses were gutted and renovated in 1995. The Lower Houses have only been partially upgraded. Before the renovations the entire building was all male, but now every house in Burwash is co-ed.
Gate House is one of the four Upper Houses of Burwash Hall. Until 2007, when Victoria administration made it co-ed, Gate House was one of the last remaining all-male residence building in the University of Toronto.[21] The Gate House emblem is the Phoenix, visible in the bottom-right corner of the Victoria College insignia. Gate House, with the rest of Upper Burwash, opened in 1913 and has held students every year since then except 1995, when it was renovated.[22]
The eight storey Rowell Jackman Hall building is an apartment style residence with each floor divided into a number of suites. The interior is ascetic: a combination of plastic runners and gray linoleum tile. When it was completed Rowell Jackman Hall was mainly home to upper years and graduate students. Today it only houses undergrads and has a considerable number of first years, except for International House, which continues to house a number of upper years.
Stephenson House was a community involvement residence at Victoria University and hosted ten undergraduate students per year. Stephenson House was self-governed and self-regulating with a separate application and selection process. It last functioned as a residence in the 2009–2010 academic year.
Vic One
Launched in 2003, the Vic One program is an academic opportunity for first-year students at the University of Toronto to build communication and leadership skills in a small classroom setting.[23] Applications typically open in December for any student who is applying to the University for enrolment in the following September.[24] The Vic One program supplements a student's primary program of study in the form of weekly small group seminars and guest lectures from professors, visiting artists, writers, ambassadors and other public figures.[25] There are eight academic streams of Vic One, each focussing on a different discipline. Enrolment in each stream is limited to 25 students, with a maximum of 250 students in the program each year.[24]
Streams
Chambers – Commerce, Economics, & Policy
Named for Margaret Chambers (Vic 3T8), founding member of The Co-operators.
Education – Education & Society
Originally named Ryerson, for the first principal of Victoria College, Egerton Ryerson. The name of the program was changed in September 2019 due to Ryerson's involvement with the residential school system in Canada.[26]
Frye – Literature & the Humanities
Named for Victoria University principal, chancellor and student, Northrop Frye (Vic 3T3), a Canadian literary critic and theorist.
Gooch – Philosophy & Ethical Citizenship
Named for Victoria University president, Paul W. Gooch, a Canadian philosopher and founding member of the Vic One program.
Jewison – Creative Arts & Society
Named for Norman Jewison (Vic 4T9), a Canadian film director and producer.
Pearson – History, Politics & Social Sciences
Named for Lester B. Pearson (Vic 1T9), former Prime Minister of Canada.
Schawlow – Physical & Mathematical Sciences
Named for Arthur Leonard Schawlow (Vic 4T1), American physicist and Nobel Prize winner.
Board of Regents
The Board of Regents is the governing body of Victoria University. The Board appoints the Chancellor, the President, the College Principals, the officers of the University, and appoints and promotes the teaching staff of Victoria and Emmanuel Colleges.[27]
Term | Chair[28] |
---|---|
1884 - 1914 | Albert Carman (Vic 1855) |
1914 - 1928 | Samuel Dwight Chown (Vic 1877) |
1928 - 1933 | Newton Wesley Rowell |
1933 - 1934 | Alfred Ernest Ames |
1934 - 1942 | James Russell Lovett Starr (Vic 1887) |
1942 - 1951 | Wilfrid Crossen James (Vic 1T6) |
1951 - 1958 | Leopold Macaulay (Vic 1T1) |
1958 - 1962 | Henry Eden Langford (Vic 2T8) |
1962 - 1971 | Ralph Shaw Mills (Vic 2T5) |
1971 - 1974 | Frederick Arthur Wansbrough (Vic 2T8) |
1974 - 1978 | Donald Walker McGibbon (Vic 3T2) |
1978 - 1982 | G. Dennis Lane (Vic 5T5) |
1982 - 1985 | Henry Jonathon Sissons (Vic 3T7) |
1985 - 1989 | David Walter Pretty (Vic 4T7) |
1989 - 1992 | Ruth Marion (Manning) Alexander (Vic 5T0) |
1992 - 1995 | Paul Wesley Fox (Vic 4T4) |
1995 - 1998 | Richard P.K. Cousland (Vic 5T4) |
1998 - 2001 | Elizabeth (Eastlake) Vosburgh (Vic 6T8) |
2001 - 2004 | David E. Clark (Vic 7T1) |
2004 - 2007 | Frank Mills (Vic 6T8) |
2007 - 2010 | Murray Corlett (Vic 6T1) |
2010 - 2014 | Paul Huyer (Vic 8T1) |
2014 - 201 | John Field (Vic 7T8) |
2018 - 2021 | Lisa Khoo (Vic 8T9) |
2021 - | Cynthia Crysler (Vic 9T0) |
Administrators
Principal[29][3] | President[29][3] | Chancellor[30] | |
---|---|---|---|
Upper Canada Academy
(1836 - 1841) |
Matthew Richey (1836 - 1840) | ||
Jesse B. Hurlburt (1840 - 1841) | |||
Victoria College
(1841 - 1884) |
Egerton Ryerson (1841 - 1847) | ||
Alexander MacNab (1847 - 1849) | Matthew Richey (1849 - 1850) | ||
John Wilson (1849 - 1850) | Egerton Ryerson (1850 - 1854) | ||
Samuel S. Nelles (1850 - 1884) | Samuel S. Nelles (1854 - 1884) | ||
Victoria University
(1884 - ) |
Samuel S. Nelles (1884 - 1887) | ||
Nathaneal Burwash (1887 - 1912) | |||
Richard Pinch Bowles (1913 - 1930) | |||
Edward Wilson Wallace (1930 - 1932) | |||
Walter Theodore Brown (1932 - 1941) | Edward Wilson Wallace (1932 - 1941) | ||
Harold Bennett (1941 - 1959) | Walter Theodore Brown (1941 - 1944) | ||
H. Northrop Frye (1959 - 1966) | Walter Theodore Brown (1944 - 1949) | Alexander Charles Spencer (1944 - 1951) | |
John Edwin Hodgetts (1967 - 1970) | Harold Bennett (1949 - 1950) | Lester Bowles Pearson (1952 - 1959) | |
John Mercel Robson (1971 - 1976) | Arthur Bruce Barbour Moore (1950 - 1970) | Louis Orville Breithaupt (1959 - 1960) | |
Gordon Lincoln Keyes (1976 - 1981) | John Edwin Hodgetts (1970 - 1972) | H. Northrop Frye (1978 - 1991) | |
Alexandra Ferguson Johnston (1981 - 1991) | Goldwin S. French (1973 - 1987) | Sang-Chul Lee (1992 - 1998) | |
William J. Callahan (1991 - 2000) | Eva Milada Kushner (1987 - 1994) | Kenneth D. Taylor (1998 - 2004) | |
David B. Cook (2000 - 2012) | Roseann Runte (1994 - 2001) | Norman Frederick Jewison (2004 - 2010) | |
Angela Esterhammer (2012 - ) | Paul W. Gooch (2001 - 2015) | Wendy Marion Cecil (2010 - 2017) | |
William R. Robins (2015 - 2022) | Carole (Goss) Taylor (2017 - 2020) | ||
Rhonda N. McEwen (2022 - ) | Nick Saul (2020 - ) |
Notable alumni and faculty
Famous Victoria alumni include Margaret Atwood, Lester B. Pearson, Don Harron, and Donald Sutherland.
- Margaret Atwood – author
- Margaret Avison – poet
- Frederick Banting – attended; Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, 1923
- William Black Creighton – social reformer
- George Blewett – philosopher and theologian
- John Clay Coleman – Methodist minister and black rights activist
- John Royston Coleman – economist, president of Haverford College, host of CBS program Money Talks
- Wilbur R. Franks – noted scientist and cancer researcher
- Northrop Frye – literary critic
- Jessa Gamble – author and science journalist
- Peter Godsoe – president and CEO of Bank of Nova Scotia, 1992–2003; chairman of Fairmont Hotels and Resorts and Sobeys, chancellor of the University of Western Ontario, 1996–2000
- Blake Goldring – executive chairman of AGF Management Limited
- W. G. Hardy – professor, writer, president of the International Ice Hockey Federation, Member of Order of Canada[31]
- Don Harron – comedian
- Lawrence Ho – billionaire businessman, chairman & CEO, Melco Crown
- Henry Horricks – pacifist and anti-racism activist
- Norman Jewison – former chancellor of Victoria University and Academy Award-winning (Irving G. Thalberg Memorial Award) filmmaker
- Ted Jolliffe – Rhodes scholar and first leader of the Ontario section of the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF)
- Ndahura II Imara Kashagama – King of Busongora Kingdom [Central Africa]
- Andromache Karakatsanis – Canadian Supreme Court justice – first Greek-Canadian judge on the court
- Paul Kneale – artist
- Jay Macpherson – poet
- Don McKellar – actor and filmmaker
- John Fletcher McLaughlin – prominent theologian
- Philip Orsino – president and CEO of Masonite International Corporation, 1989–2005
- Richard Outram – poet
- Steve Paikin – journalist
- Lester B. Pearson – former Prime Minister of Canada and Nobel Laureate
- E. J. Pratt – poet
- Laure Rièse – first female faculty member
- Egerton Ryerson – one of the founders of Victoria College and its first president
- Nick Saul - Canadian food and social justice activist, author
- Arthur L. Schawlow – physicist, Nobel laureate
- Arthur Sifton – second premier of Alberta
- Augusta Stowe-Gullen – first woman to graduate from a Canadian medical school
- Donald Sutherland – Academy Honorary Award-winning actor
- Carole Taylor – former minister of finance of British Columbia, former chancellor of Simon Fraser University
- Kenneth D. Taylor – former chancellor of Victoria University and former Canadian ambassador to Iran
- Vaira Vīķe-Freiberga – 6th president of Latvia
- Ian Williams - writer, 2019 Giller Prize winner
- Bob Young – entrepreneur, co-founder of Red Hat
- J. Lavell Smith – anti-war activist
References
- ^ "Victoria University : Financial Statements : April 30, 2021" (PDF). Vicui.utoronto.ca. Retrieved Sep 30, 2022.
- ^ Liang, Xuelun (2021). University of Toronto Facts and Figures (PDF). Office of Government, Institutional and Community Relations.
- ^ a b c Burwash, Nathaneal (1927). History of Victoria College. Toronto: Victoria College Press.
- ^ Burwash, Nathaneal (1927). History of Victoria College. Toronto: Victoria College Press. p. 41.
- ^ The Project Gutenberg EBook #6466 of 'The Intellectual Development of the Canadian People, A historical review' by John George Bourinot, House of Commons, Ottawa, February 17th, 1881
- ^ Pound, Richard W. (2005). Fitzhenry and Whiteside Book of Canadian Facts and Dates. Fitzhenry and Whiteside.
- ^ Rynor, F. Michah (2001). "Royal Gems". UofT Magazine (Winter 2001). Toronto: University of Toronto. Retrieved 3 October 2009.
- ^ "DHH - Memorials Details Search Results". www.cmp-cpm.forces.gc.ca. Archived from the original on 8 September 2012. Retrieved 14 January 2022.
- ^ Canada, Library and Archives (27 November 2008). "Link to this page". Amicus.collectionscanada.gc.ca. Retrieved 20 December 2018.
- ^ a b "About the Library | About Us | E.J. Pratt Library". library.vicu.utoronto.ca. Retrieved 2021-08-19.
- ^ "Senate Powers and By-Laws". Archived from the original on 2007-08-20. Retrieved 2018-12-20.
- ^ University of Victoria. (2020. Statement of Financial Information. https://www.uvic.ca/vpfo/accounting/reports/uvicfinancialstatements/FIA-2019-20.pdf
- ^ "Special Collections | Collections | E.J. Pratt Library". library.vicu.utoronto.ca. Retrieved 2021-08-19.
- ^ "About the Archives | Archives | E.J. Pratt Library". library.vicu.utoronto.ca. Retrieved 2021-08-19.
- ^ "Academic Programs". Archived from the original on 2007-03-29. Retrieved 2007-04-12.
- ^ "The Boundary". The Varsity. Retrieved 2020-12-13.
- ^ "VUSAC – CLUBS". Victoria-university. Retrieved 20 December 2018.
- ^ "VUSAC". Vusac.ca. Retrieved 2016-09-11.
- ^ "Despite cuts and critics, Bob carries on". Thenewspaper.ca. Retrieved 20 December 2018.
- ^ "Annesley Hall National Historic Site of Canada". Canada's Historic Places. Parks Canada. Retrieved 2012-08-22.
Annesley Hall was designated a national historic site because it is a particularly good example of the Queen Anne Revival style, as expressed in institutional architecture. Designed by architect G. M. Miller, and built in 1902-1903, Annesley Hall was the first purpose-built women's residence on a Canadian university campus.
- ^ Taylor, Bill (2007-12-19). "Party's over at U of T residence". Toronto Star. Retrieved 2007-12-19.
- ^ Houghton, Sarah (2003-03-12). "One Hundred Years of Architecture". The Strand. Archived from the original on 2007-05-25. Retrieved 2007-06-05.
- ^ "#UofTGrad2016: Oxford-bound grad found time to do nearly everything at U of T". University of Toronto News. Retrieved 2022-01-12.
- ^ a b "Vic One » Victoria College". vic.utoronto.ca. Retrieved 2022-01-12.
- ^ "A Rhodes Scholar and student leader, U of T grad Ikran Jama brought her community into the classroom". University of Toronto News. Retrieved 2022-01-12.
- ^ Alam, Khadija (2020-03-17). "Remembering Ryerson". The Strand. Retrieved 2022-01-12.
- ^ "Board of Regents » Victoria University". vicu.utoronto.ca. Retrieved 2022-03-04.
- ^ "Board of Regents » Victoria University". vicu.utoronto.ca. Retrieved 2022-02-02.
- ^ a b Sissons, C. B. (1952). A History of Victoria University. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
- ^ "Victoria University Chancellor » Victoria University". vicu.utoronto.ca. Retrieved 2021-09-30.
- ^ Peacock, Jim (May 3, 1958). "Writing Is His Hobby". Lethbridge Herald. Lethbridge, Alberta. p. 4.
Further reading
- Martin L. Friedland The University of Toronto: A History (Toronto: University of Toronto Press © 2002)
- Neil Semple Faithful Intellect: Samuel S. Nelles And Victoria University (Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press, September 1, 2004)
- C. B. Sissons A History of Victoria University. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1952.
External links
43°40′1″N 79°23′31″W / 43.66694°N 79.39194°W
- Official website
- Archival papers of William James Callahan, President of Victoria College (1991-2000), held at the University of Toronto Archives and Records Management Services