In 1851, the first
YMCA in North America was established on Sainte-Hélène Street in Old Montreal. Beginning in 1873, the YMCA offered evening classes to allow working people in the
English-speaking community to pursue their education while working during the day. Sixty years later, the Montreal YMCA relocated to its current location on
Stanley Street in
Downtown Montreal. In 1926, the education program at the YMCA was re-organized as Sir George Williams College, named after
George Williams, founder of the original YMCA in
London, upon which the Montreal YMCA was based. In 1934, Sir George Williams College offered the first undergraduate credit course in adult education in Canada. Sir George Williams College received its university charter from the provincial government in 1948, though it remained the education arm of the Montreal YMCA. Sir George Williams expanded into its first standalone building, the Norris Building, in 1956. In 1959, the college requested that the Quebec legislature amend its university charter, changing its name to Sir George Williams University. It established a Centre for Human Relations and Community Studies in 1963. Sir George Williams continued to hold classes in the YMCA building until the construction of the Henry F. Hall Building in 1966. Following several years of discussions and planning, Sir George Williams University merged with Loyola College to create Concordia University in 1974. Concordia provided students with representative student organizations and greater power over administrative decisions at the university.
Sir George Williams Computer Centre Incident The university gained international attention in 1969, when a group of Black students occupied the
Henry F. Hall Building's 9th floor computer lab to protest alleged racism by the university. This protest was documented in the 2015 documentary film
Ninth Floor by director
Mina Shum, and the 2025 documentary film
True North by
Michèle Stephenson. ==Sir George Williams Georgians==