Early Indian Schools in Sault Ste. Marie Prior to the establishment of the Shingwauk School, smaller school mission schools existed in Sault Ste. Marie. In the 1830s, Chief
Shingwauk traveled by canoe and snowshoe to York (now Toronto) to petition Governor John Colborne to provide resources for a 'Teaching Wigwam' in Garden River. In 1833 William McMurray, an
Anglican missionary arrived in
Garden River First Nation. His arrival resulted in the establishment of a day school at the top of Pim Hill in Sault Ste. Marie. This day school was attended by children from
Garden River First Nation and was funded by the government and the Anglican Church. A second day mission school was later established in the Garden River community in 1870. The school opened with sixteen boys enrolled as students. Six days after opening, the school was completely destroyed by fire.
Shingwauk Home Following the destruction of the School in Garden River, Wilson purchased a 90-acre site in Sault Ste. Marie, at what is now known as 1520 Queen Street East. On July 31, 1874, the
Earl of Dufferin,
Governor General of Canada visited the school site and laid the cornerstone of what would become the Shingwauk Home. The new school officially opened on August 2, 1875, to 50 students. By the mid-1880s Wilson decided that the Wawanosh Home could be more effectively managed if the girls were located on the same site as the Shingwauk Home. As a result, a girls wing was added onto the Shingwauk Home on Queen Street. In 1900 the Wawanosh Home officially relocated to the Shingwauk site. The old Wawanosh Home was purchased by the Children's Aid Society of Algoma. The building was operated as a shelter from 1912 to 1955. Now the site is home to the Sault Ste. Marie Legion Hall, branch 25
New Shingwauk Indian Residential School In 1935 the new Shingwauk Hall opened on the Shingwauk site, immediately behind the old building. This new building was designed for 140 students and contained many modern conveniences such as running water and electricity that the old Shingwauk Home did not have. New Shingwauk Hall was designed by
Roland Gurney Orr the Chief
Architect for the
Department of Indian Affairs, the building was built in an industrial style that was replicated in many residential schools and government building across Canada. Many of Orr's buildings, including Shingwauk Hall were designed in the
Collegiate Gothic style. The architecture of the Shingwauk building is almost identical to other residential schools across Canada - including the Indian Residential School in
Edmonton, Alberta, the
Kamloops Residential School, and the
St. Paul's Indian Residential School - all built in the 1920s based on Orr's plans. The Shingwauk School was closed by the Department of Indian Affairs in June 1970. Algoma University College moved onto the Shingwauk site in 1971 and the Shingwauk Hall building is presently the main building of
Algoma University. Until April 1, 1969, all iterations of the Shingwauk Residential School were operated by the
Missionary Society of the Church of England. From April 1 to the closure of the Shingwauk School on June 30, 1970, the Government of Canada took over the administration of the church. Despite this transfer of administrative power the land help by the Shingwauk School remained in the hands of the
Diocese of Algoma. This was due to a previous agreement that stipulated that the cost of the land or the land itself would be transferred back to the Diocese at the conclusion of use by the Government. ==School chapel==