Ontario Veterinary College


The Ontario Veterinary College is the oldest veterinary school in Canada. It is located on the campus of the University of Guelph in Guelph, Ontario. The OVC is one of five veterinary schools that offer the Doctor of Veterinary Medicine, DVM program in Canada. This program is highly competitive and only admits a select number of applicants each year. The OVC was ranked 1st in Canada and 5th in the world for veterinary medicine by the QS World University Rankings 2020.

History

Originally called Upper Canada Veterinary School, the Ontario Veterinary College was established in Toronto in 1862, by the Scots Andrew Smith with some assistance from Duncan McNab McEachran, both graduates of the Royal School of Veterinary Studies at the University of Edinburgh. The college adopted the current name in 1867, the year of Canada's Confederation. McEachran was a staff member but he considered the admission standards and academic requirements to be inadequate. He left after three years, moving to Montreal where he helped establish Montreal Veterinary College.
The school's first classes took place at 188 King Street West in 1861 and then at Agricultural Hall at Yonge and Queen Streets in 1862. The first permanent site of the school was at Bay Street and Temperance Street in 1870 and University Avenue in 1914. By 1897, the college was affiliated with the University of Toronto and in 1908 it was acquired from Smith by the government of Ontario.
It later moved to Guelph, Ontario and remained affiliated with the University of Toronto until it became a founding college of the University of Guelph in 1964.
In 1928 Miss E. B. Carpenter from Detroit was the first woman to graduate from a Canadian veterinary college. She was accepted to the school in 1923, one year after the Sex Disqualification Act allowed Miss Aleen Cust to complete her exams at the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons. The first woman to graduate from OVC was Dr. G. E. Fritz from New York, the first Canadian woman to graduate from OVC or any other Canadian veterinary college was Jean Rumney in 1939 and the second was Edith Williams in 1941, also a graduate of OVC. Today the majority of Canadian veterinary school graduates are women.
In 1964 it became a founding college of the University of Guelph. The college severed ties with University of Toronto and its principal became the dean of the college. The OVC celebrated its 150th anniversary in 2012.

About

The Ontario Veterinary College is the only veterinary college in the province of Ontario, and the oldest of only five current veterinary colleges across Canada. In the 2020 World University Rankings, the Ontario Veterinary College was ranked as the top veterinary school in Canada and 5th in the world. The other four veterinary schools in Canada are at the Université de Montréal, University of Prince Edward Island, the University of Saskatchewan and the University of Calgary. The University of Calgary, which opened in 2008, is the youngest of the five.

Changes

In February 2008, OVC was granted $9.5 million from the province of Ontario. The intent was to help the college develop a primary-care teaching hospital for small animals.
The Hill's Primary Healthcare Centre opened during the summer of 2010 as a veterinary clinic and an educational facility for all veterinary students. A new state-of-the-art Pathobiology building opened in the fall of 2010. A new large animal isolation facility serves to treat equine patients at high-risk for infectious disease.
In March 2016, the provincial government announced a $23 million grant to add a new building and to renovate the animal hospital. The plan was to add new classrooms and labs, to install new equipment and to improve biosecurity and infection control.

Campus

The main OVC building is located on Gordon St. at College St. in Guelph, Ontario. The Dean's Office is at 50 Stone Road, Guelph.

Academics

OVC offers bachelor's degrees in bio-medical science, but its primary degree offering is the DVM. The College also offers DVSc, PhD, MSc, MPH, and Diploma programs at the graduate level. The DVM program is one of the most competitive in the world. The annual number of places available in the Doctor of Veterinary Medicine program is 120 seats with 105 for Canadians with Ontario residency and 15 for non-Canadians.

Student life

Each year 120 student veterinarians are admitted to the school, after successfully completing the highly competitive application and interview processes. Student veterinarians at OVC can usually be found studying in the Lifetime Learning Center, having a coffee in the Pathobiology building, or playing hocking at the Gryphon Center. OVC students are encouraged to join a wide array of clubs and organizations, including Diagnostic Imaging, Parasitology, Surgery, 3D printing club and many more! In phase one as a student veterinarians are in invited to a 'Blue Coat Ceremony'. At this ceremony, students are gifted their blue lab coats by the university. This signifies the start of their journey to becoming a veterinarian. This event is only trumped by the coveted 'White Coat Ceremony' at the end of phase three. The white coat ceremony signifies a students transition from class-based learning to clinical rotations. A beloved tradition at OVC is the naming of each class with a mascot and a colour. This mascot represents the class throughout the four phases, and is used regularly in conjunction with not only academics, but also intramural sports. Hockey plays a large part in these intramurals, with rivalries coming to a head in a college-wide "Challenge Cup" tournament, held each year in March.
Past Classes have included:
Current Classes are:
Dr. W. J. R. Fowler taught equine surgery, materia medica, sporadic diseases, and lameness in horses. Fowler was recognized internationally, and had already taught at Ontario Veterinary College for over 55 years under 5 principles.
Dr. F. W. Schofield taught pathology, parasitology and bacteriology. He was also a missionary, travelling around the world preaching Christianity in his off time.
Dr. Ronald G. Watkin taught bacteriology, milk hygiene, and diseases in poultry. He was an acclaimed research scientist. Ronald retired with Dr. Scofield in 1955.
Principal Charles D. McGilvray was the 3rd principal of the school from 1918 to 1945. He taught contagious diseases, special therapeutics, and sanitary service subjects. He obtained the nickname "Shot-gun Charlie" from his handling of Glanders Disease in Manitoba between 1905 and 1910.