Historic schools At one time Regina had six private high schools associated with religion—three Roman Catholic, one Methodist, one Anglican, one Lutheran—as well as public secondary and junior college education both Roman Catholic and non-sectarian. File:Victoria School at 2025 McIntyre Street between Victoria Avenue and 13th Avenue.jpg|Victoria School at 2025 McIntyre Street between Victoria Avenue and 13th Avenue, whose site was after demolition used for a new YMCA in the 1950s. File:Connaught School Regina.jpg|Connaught Public School shortly after construction. Like the major shopping street in
New Delhi, named for
Duke of Connaught, then Governor General of Canada. File:Regina College at 16th Avenue (now College Avenue) and Broad Street, 1913. Building under construction..jpg|Regina College under construction, 1913. Note chickens in foreground. File:Sacred Heart Academy -113539588.jpg|The former Sacred Heart Academy, now converted to private condominium-title residences, but also housing the Roman Catholic Synod Office. File:LutherCollegeHS.jpg|Luther College, Royal Street and Dewdney Avenue, site of first Government House. File:Campion_College_Regina_corner_of_Albert_Street_and_23rd_Avenue.jpg|Campion College, corner Albert Street and 23rd Avenue, closed when federated Campion College was opened at Regina Campus cum the University of Regina. It was named for Saint
Edmund Campion. The Regina College Building together with Darke Hall and the old Girls' Residence now constitute the "Old Campus" on College Avenue. As successive faculties have been removed to the New Campus, including the Department of Music which provided intellectual, artistic and facility support to the Regina Conservatory of Music, the Old Campus seeks a new raison d'être and the Conservatory somewhat flounders. Connaught School was named after the
Duke of Connaught, then Governor General, and for 105 years was located on Elphinstone Street at 13th Avenue. The public school board decided to demolish it in 2014 and rebuild, rather than preserve the historic structure. St Chad's Anglican Diocesan School was operated by the Anglican Sisters of St John the Divine on the then-Anglican diocesan property immediately to the east of Regina College on College Avenue until it closed for financial reasons in 1970. (See below, "Germantown and the East End.") The Anglican diocese confronted the realities of its demographic marginality in the 1970s and sold its property to the provincial Crown: the City of Regina is now confronted with the problem of responsibly developing the former Anglican diocesan property. (See below). The Roman Catholic
Jesuit Order operated
Campion College, originally a high school with junior college accreditation with the University of Saskatchewan like Regina College, on 23rd Avenue; the Sisters of Our Lady of the Missions operated Sacred Heart College, later Marian High School, to the south of Campion College on Albert Street and Sacred Heart Academy in the West End immediately adjacent to Holy Rosary Cathedral. Historically the Academy was not only a private Roman Catholic girls' high school –
Jacqueline Shumiatcher was once a classroom teacher there, Sister Joan Millar a piano teacher before obtaining her PhD and joining the faculty as a music professor at
Brandon University;
Erika Ritter, a Toronto "playwright, radio dramatist, novelist, humourist, short fiction writer and radio broadcasterand broadcaster," is from Regina and went to Sacred Heart for high school, as did a current a justice of the Saskatchewan Court of Queen's Bench both a music and school student there. All are now closed, though the Campion and Sacred Heart Academy buildings survive with new uses: Campion as a conservative Evangelical Protestant religious school; Sacred Heart Academy as residential condominiums. The
Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada's Luther College, on the site of the original Government House next to the
RCMP Academy, Depot Division, is the one remaining historic private school in Regina. Campion College no longer operates a high school, though its original building is now used as a private school run by another denomination; Campion College is now a federated college at the University of Regina, as is Luther College.
Theatres and concert halls Darke Hall, a civic theatre and concert hall adjacent to Regina College, was donated by
Francis Nicholson Darke. In the pre-television era Regina, like other comparably sized cities throughout North America, was served by legitimate theatre buildings where both touring professional productions and local amateur productions were staged as well as by numerous movie houses: such public entertainments were offered in an abundance that seems astonishing in the 21st century city which is several times larger. The 1908 City Hall, as was customary at the time, and as with the obviously substantially larger (and surviving)
Town Halls of
London,
New York City,
Sydney and
Brisbane, contained a large central theatre and concert hall-
cum-ballroom. Mr Darke also donated the carillon of chimes to the then-
Methodist, now
United Church of Canada Metropolitan Church in downtown Regina which is still heard. Darke Hall opened in 1929. From 1929 until 1970 on the opening of the
Saskatchewan Centre of the Arts (now the Conexus Arts Centre) it was the concert hall of the
Regina Symphony Orchestra. It remains the recital and concert hall for the Regina Conservatory of Music and the University of Regina's Department of Music as well as the venue for amateur theatricals and public lectures. Darke Hall was for many years Regina’s principal concert hall and theatre, particularly after: File:Broadway Theatre Regina Saskatchewan 1941.jpg|Broadway Theatre, Broad Street. Opened 1930, closed 1931–41 because of the Great Depression but vastly successful until final closure in 1981. Here showing "Hellzapoppin,'" 1941 Regina Met and Army & Navy 1965.jpg|Metropolitan Theatre, summer 1965 when "Art of Love" with Dick Van Dyke showing. Originally the Allen Theatre, it opened December 30, 1918. It was closed and for sale in 1987 File:Rex closed about 1959 at 1784 Hamilton street.jpg|Rex film theatre, the second on site after first burned in 1938 File:Regina Grand Theatre opened in 1912 housing both stage productions and moving pictures.jpg|Regina Grand Theatre opened in 1912 and closed in 1957 on 11th Avenue and like other cinemas housing both stage productions and moving pictures. Here in 1940 File:Rex Theatre (original).jpg|Original Rex Theatre destroyed by fire 1938 By the 1980s,
Famous Players, which had acquired the Capitol, by then the last historic stage-theatre and cinema remaining in the central business district, was in financial trouble and desperately divided the Cap in half to make a poor-man's multiplex; ultimately the Cap itself was closed. :(a) The destruction by fire in 1939 of the 800-seat
Regina Theatre on the corner of 12th Avenue and Hamilton (now the site of the old
Hudson's Bay Company department store building). It was home from 1910 to the Regina Operatic Society, the Regina Orchestral Society and travelling vaudeville and stage plays. The Regina Theatre doubled as a cinema and a legitimate theatre; famous travelling troupes which crossed Canada on the CPR before cinema and television performed there. One was being performed in by
Boris Karloff, when the
Regina Cyclone struck in 1912; he famously took part in the exercise of helping out immediately afterwards. And :(b) The demolition of Old City Hall in 1965, whose ballroom had provided a multi-purpose space used for civic receptions, concerts, theatre, balls and indeed boxing. The
Army & Navy across 11th Avenue is also now long-closed and demolished, despite having been renovated and doubled in size in 1969. Downtown cinemas included the Regina, the Grand and, both on Broad Street, the 1000-seat Metropolitan and the Broadway Theatres. The Broadway was Regina's first "all-talkie" movie theatre, built by theatre owner and manager Harry Bercovich. Styled in the "Spanish villa" theme inside and outside, it opened on January 1, 1930. However, the theatre was closed little more than a year later because of the Great Depression. It would remain closed until it finally reopened in 1941. "Bercovich ... , however ... managed the Rex Theatre and made use of his canny entrepreneurial skills to attract business even in the midst of the Depression. He held "Bank Nights" weekly at the Rex, giving away door prizes to attract business. He gave away silverware and dishes as well, patrons having to return each week in order to collect the complete set of dishes or silverware." The theatre was sold to the Famous Players theatre chain in 1969. It stayed open until 1981, when it closed permanently. The building was demolished in the early 1990s. The largest of all, the 1500-seat Capitol Theatre, built in 1921, doubled as a movie house and live stage venue and after the Regina Theatre burned to the ground the Capitol was Regina's principal downtown venue for "legitimate" theatre: the famous annual Canadian travelling revue "Spring Thaw" was staged here through the 1950s. "The theatre boasted its own 10-person orchestra to accompany the silent movies and vaudeville acts that were popular at the time. In 1940, the Capitol Theatre had an evening of Hollywood-style glamour when it hosted the world premiere of the movie 'North West Mounted Police.'" City planners seeking to revitalise the downtown business district must contend with the consequences of decisions made by predecessors who directed the city's entertainment facilities away from the city centre.
Gallery of theatres indoors File:Production of the Regina Operatic Society at the Regina Theatre.jpg|Production of the Regina Operatic Society at the Regina Theatre, 1913: corner of Hamilton Street and 12th Avenue, later the site of the Hudson's Bay Company department store File:Regina_Theatre_production_of_"Merrie_England".1922.jpg|Regina Theatre's 1922 production of "Merry England" File:Freddie_Rowan_in_"Singalee,"_1925.jpg|Freddie Rowan in "Singalee," Regina Theatre 1925 File:Rose Theatre Orchestra -- Regina 1914.jpg|The Rose Theatre featured an orchestra that played to accompany the silent movies that aired on its screen. The orchestra was quite popular in Regina and frequently provided entertainment for local events File:Metropolitan Theatre 1701 Broad Street Regina.jpg|The Allen Theatre, 1701 Broad Street, opened December 30, 1918. Later renamed Metropolitan Theatre, it was closed and for sale in 1987. Photo of the exterior above File:Capitol Theatre, 1929.jpg|Capitol Theatre, 12th Avenue and Scarth Street, built in 1921, here pictured in 1929 File:Rex theatre before the fire.( source Sept 16, 1938.jpg|Rex Theatre second version in 1958 interior
Victoria Park and surrounding buildings At "the start of the twentieth century [a] much more attractive park [than Victoria Park was] the CPR Gardens, commonly referred to as Stanley Park. This plot of land boasted trees, shrubs and flowers: from its beginning there was difficulty establishing parklands and recreational areas in Regina, it lacking natural rolling land, trees, shrubs and apart from the spring run-off Wascana Creek and even smaller and shorter creeks, natural flowing water. The little park beautified the land right next to the CPR's main depot in Regina, Union Station. (Today, this site is ... the parking lot of Casino Regina.)" Victoria Park quickly became the location of surrounding facilities and attractions: the First Baptist Church; Metropolitan Methodist; the YWCA; Carnegie Library, built as in many cities of North America and the United Kingdom with a grant from the Carnegie Foundation; the McCallum Hill Building, an early office building of downtown Regina; the Capitol Theatre; the Hotel Saskatchewan. First Baptist, Metropolitan Methodist, Carnegie Library, Knox Presbyterian and the YMCA were all destroyed in the 1912
Regina "Cyclone" but quickly rebuilt — the Library with the help of a further Carnegie grant. It was demolished and replaced in 1962 by an impressively large though architecturally undistinguished building on the same site at Lorne Street and 12th Avenue which, like the Court of Appeal and Queens Bench building on Victoria Avenue, preserves remnants of its predecessor in its forecourt. The institution of amply endowed public libraries became well established in Regina and Regina burgesses quickly became inured to the idea of such facilities being worthwhile public facilities and worthy of substantial public endowment. Latterly the Regina City Council has sought to cut costs by proposing to close neighbourhood libraries, including the Connaught Library in the West End (latterly dubbed the "Cathedral Area"), to general public condemnation. File:Carnegie Library, 1925.jpg|Carnegie Library, 1925 File:YMCA and Knox Presbyterian circa 1912.jpg|Knox Presbyterian Church and YMCA circa 1912 prior to destruction of both in the 1912 "Cyclone" File:A-1497 McCallum Hill Building 1913.jpg|McCallum Hill Building 1913, north of the northeast corner of the park File:Hotel Saskatchewan, circa 1930.jpg|Hotel Saskatchewan, circa 1930 File:King George VI and Queen Elizabeth on Victoria Avenue about to enter Victoria Park, 1939.jpg|King George VI and Queen Elizabeth on Victoria Avenue about to enter Victoria Park, 1939 The McCallum Hill Building was constructed in 1913 on the north side of the street from the northeast corner of the park. For many years it was the largest private office building in the city and the tallest building in Saskatchewan at ten storeys high, of course only rivaled in height and conspicuousness within the province by the Hotel Saskatchewan in Regina and Saskatoon’s
Bessborough Hotel. Real estate developers E.A. McCallum, E. M. McCallum and Walter H.A. Hill began construction of the McCallum-Hill office building in 1912. The McCallum-Hill Building was imploded in six seconds with 200 pounds of explosives in 1982 and replaced by the 22-storey McCallum Hill Centre Tower I and Tower II, both on Scarth Street. Knox Presbyterian, Metropolitan Methodist and First Baptist were also across the street from Victoria Park, the latter two still standing (see below), as is the
Hotel Saskatchewan. Completed in 1927, the Hotel Saskatchewan was in part constructed from building materials of the never-completed
Chateau Qu'Appelle at the corner of Albert Street and 16th Avenue (later renamed College Avenue) on what became the grounds of the Royal Saskatchewan Museum. Besides use for accommodation, dining, entertainment and facilities for wedding receptions and other such functions, it immediately replaced use of Government House for accommodating official visitors including political leaders and royalty: George VI and Queen Elizabeth, for example, stayed there rather than in Government House when they were in Regina during their six-week tour across Canada and back again by train. Also on the opposite sides of streets from Victoria Park were the now long-demolished Capitol Theatre (opened in 1921: photos above in theatre section) and the first YMCA and YWCA. Originally owned by the
CPR, though now part of the
Radisson Hotels chain, it was much simpler in style and less expensive to build than famous earlier-built CPR and
CNR hotels but also than Saskatoon's
Bessborough Hotel, built from 1928 to 1932. Nevertheless, it was and remains a luxury hotel, since its 1927 a preferred accommodation for prominent visitors including members of the Royal Family, its night club long an entertainment centre and its dining room favoured for luxurious wedding receptions.
Gallery of central business district, turn of the 20th century through the 1930s File:CORA H 9 Downtown Regina , South Railway Street on the left running back towards Broad Street.jpg|South Railway Street running back towards Broad Street File:RPL-A-395 Looking east down 11 th Avenue from Scarth Street, 1906 . On the right is the Post Office under construction..jpg|East down 11th Avenue from Scarth Street, 1906. On the right is the Post Office under construction File:RPL-A-747 Sherwood Department Store 1913.jpg|Sherwood Department Store, 1913. Building remains in use as Saskatchewan Wheat Pool Building File:A-1332 Scarth Street and King's Hotel, 1920.jpg|Scarth Street and King's Hotel, 1920 File:Postcard of the Chateau Qu'Appelle.jpg|Postcard of the building-in-progress Chateau Qu'Appelle published and distributed in or about 1913. ==Germantown and the East End==