Mulvey School History
June 26, 2023
There was a large Icelandic settlement in the area. Children attended Mulvey from Grades 1 to 6 and then transferred to Carlton School for Grades 7 and 8.
On April 9, 1895, only two years later, the second Mulvey School was completely destroyed by a fire. It was believed the fire was deliberately started on the top floor of the school.
The third school was built in 1895 with twelve rooms and an Assembly Hall. It was built at a cost of $25 000 as the foundations of the burnt school were still good. This school housed Grades 1 to 7 and in 1897 Grade 8 was added.
Overcrowding was so bad in 1908 that a 9-room addition was added. In 1922, again to relieve overcrowding, the Assembly Hall was made into two classrooms. Mulvey School accommodated 900 children and a staff of 21 teachers.
The third Mulvey School stood until 1960 when it was torn down. A new high school was built on the Mulvey site. Mulvey pupils were transferred over to the old Gordon Bell School on the corner of Wolseley and Maryland. There, the old Gordon Bell School, built in 1925, became the fourth and current Mulvey School.
Major Stewart Mulvey (1834-1908)
Mulvey School was named after Major Stewart Mulvey who was born in Ireland in 1834 and moved to Ontario in 1856, where he taught for fourteen years. Major Mulvey came to Manitoba after a time, and was appointed a member of the Provincial Board of Education for several years. He was elected as one of the first School Trustees of the city, as well as the Secretary Treasurer of the School Board.
Throughout his tenure as a School Trustee, he endeavored to secure an adequate portion of the city’s taxes for the education of the children of Winnipeg. In 1886, Major Mulvey was also elected as a member of the legislature. Not only was he involved in education, but was also instrumental in the forming of the first military corps here and a director of the first organization of the General Hospital.
Major Stewart Mulvey passed away on May 26, 1908. His portrait still hangs in the library of Mulvey School. A school which bears his name to acknowledge his contribution and his legacy.