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In 1997, the provincial government amalgamated agriculture education across the province under the University of Guelph and OAC. Three previous Colleges of Agricultural Technology were now being run by the University of Guelph and OAC: College d'Alfred, a francophone college in the eastern part of the province at Alfred, Ontario; Kemptville College, founded in 1917 and located at Kemptville ...
The University of Guelph (abbreviated U of G) is a comprehensive public research university in Guelph, Ontario, Canada.It was established in 1964 after the amalgamation of Ontario Agricultural College (1874), the MacDonald Institute (1903), and the Ontario Veterinary College (1922), and has since grown to an institution of almost 30,000 students (including those at the Humber campus, Ridgetown ...
The Ontario Universities' Application Centre (OUAC) (French: Centre de demande d’admission aux universités de l’Ontario) is a non-profit organization based in Guelph that processes online applications for admission to universities in Ontario, Canada.
The locale of No. 4 Wireless School. RCAF Station Guelph was a Second World War British Commonwealth Air Training Plan (BCATP) station located in Guelph, Ontario on the campus of the Ontario Agricultural College (OAC), the Ontario Veterinary College (OVC), and the Macdonald Institute. [1]
As the OAC, the team competed as early as the 1899–00 Ontario Hockey Association Intermediate season and transitioned to the University of Guelph Gryphons while sitting out the 1963–64 season. The Gryphons won the University Cup in 1997, emblematic of Canadian scholastic hockey supremacy.
The Guelph Gryphons men's ice hockey team is an active ice hockey program representing the Guelph Gryphons athletic department of the University of Guelph.The team has been active since the formation of the college in 1964 and is currently a member of the Ontario University Athletics conference under the authority of U Sports.
The University of Guelph traces its origins back to May 1, 1874, when the Province of Ontario purchased 200 hectares (490 acres) of farmland and opened the Ontario School of Agriculture, which later became Ontario Agricultural College (OAC). [4]
The OAC has its own offices, storage rooms, dining and conference facilities as well as small lecture rooms for OAC classes within Johnston Hall. [11] Although the OAC was established in 1874, it would later become one of three founding colleges of the University of Guelph in 1964.