Shawnigan Lake School
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(Let whoever has deserved the palm bear it)
| Shawnigan Lake School | |
|---|---|
| Location | |
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1975 Renfrew Road , , Canada | |
| Coordinates | 48°39′26″N 123°38′20″W / 48.6573°N 123.6390°W |
| Information | |
| School type | Private boarding and day |
| Motto | Palmam Qui Meruit Ferat (Let whoever has deserved the palm bear it) |
| Founded | 1916 |
| Headmaster | Richard 'Larry' Lamont |
| Staff | 250 |
| Grades | 8–12 |
| Enrollment | 550 |
| Language | English |
| Colours | Black and gold |
| Mascot | The Stag |
| Endowment | CA$32,000,000 |
| Website | www |
| Last updated: March 17, 2026 | |
Shawnigan Lake School is an independent and co-educational boarding school located in Shawnigan Lake, British Columbia, Canada. The school was founded in 1916 by Christopher Lonsdale, an educator from Cumberland, England, and partly modelled after his alma mater, the Westminster School in London, England.[1] It is Canada's largest co-educational independent boarding school.
Originally an all-boy's school, it became fully co-educational in 1988. The school has produced many notable alumni, including several artists, athletes, diplomats, politicians, scientists, and businesspeople.
Lonsdale chose Horatio Nelson's motto, Palmam Qui Meruit Ferat ("Let whosoever deserves the palm bear it") as the school's motto.

As of September 2025, the student body at Shawnigan Lakes School consists of 540 students representing 30 countries, with 440 students residing on campus in boarding houses, the largest number of full-time boarders in Canada. Students come from all over the world, with 50 percent from British Columbia, 15 percent from other Canadian provinces, 5 percent from the United States, and 30 percent from other international locations.[2] Shawnigan sets aside $6 million for financial aid and scholarships every year.
Current campus
Shawnigan Lake School occupies a wooded 270-acre (1.1 km2) campus near the village of Shawnigan Lake, British Columbia. There are approximately 80 buildings on the site:
The Main Building, built in 1926, sits adjacent to the quadrangle, which houses the school's chapel (built 1928), dining hall (Marion Hall), and the Bruce-Lockhart Centre for Creativity (built 1934, formerly the Hobbies Building). Other facilities include classroom buildings, dormitories and staff housing, a theatre, a music building, an astronomy observatory, a recording arts studio, a growing dome, a salmon hatchery, and a robotics lab.
Athletic facilities include the Charlie Purdey Arena for ice hockey and figure skating, a rowing crewhouse shared with Rowing Canada Aviron, the Hyde-Lay Rugby Pavilion, two gymnasiums, six tennis courts, eight squash courts, and seven sports fields, including Canada Field, often used by Rugby Canada and other international teams.
School life
Student Body & Boarding Houses
The school is primarily a boarding school, with approximately 82 percent of its students attending the school as boarders. The school has 10 boarding houses: five for boys in grades 9-12 and four for girls in grades 9-12, as well as Samuel House, a dedicated Grade 8 boarding house with separate wings for boys and girls, which opened in 2024. Each boarding house has a full-time House Director and an Assistant House Director, who are assisted by other staff members, along with student Heads of House and House Prefects in the management of house duties and issues. Each year, houses compete against each other in an annual intramural competition for the House Cup, determined by a variety of events throughout the year as well as academic achievement.
Shawnigan's student government consists of Round Tables from Grades 8 to 11, with the highest position of student leadership being School Prefects, who are appointed in their final year. The Prefects are led by the Co-Heads of School, who are elected from within the incoming Prefect group at the end of each academic year.
Boy Houses:
- Lake's House (1927)
- Ripley's House (1927)
- Copeman's House (1929)
- Lonsdale's House (1968)
- Duxbury House (1999)
Girl Houses:
- Groves' House (1927)
- Kaye's House (1989)
- Renfrew House (1996)
- Strathcona House (2007)
Co-Ed (Grade 8):
- Samuel House (2024)
Academics
Shawnigan's academic program is university preparatory. It was ranked by the Fraser Institute in 2017 as 11th out of 253 British Columbian Secondary Schools based on a score of 9.3/10 for academic achievements.[3] The school provides 25 Advanced Placement (AP) courses offered by the College Board, as well as a Dual Dogwood Diploma program for French Immersion students. Shawnigan graduates regularly move on to top universities around the world, including Ivy League universities and Oxford.
Fine Arts
Students are required to try a variety of fine arts and activities, known as the 360 program, selecting from a list of 30 or more options.[4] Notable programs include recording arts, robotics, musicals, Model United Nations, astronomy, woodworking, search and rescue, and various bands and music groups. The theatre program includes at least one large-scale production each year, which is usually performed in the McPherson Playhouse in Victoria.
Athletics
Shawnigan has official partnerships with Rugby Canada and Rowing Canada, with both national teams using the school's training facilities on a regular basis. The school also has a partnership with Thunder Indigenous Rugby. In 2014, Shawnigan joined the Canadian Sport School Hockey League.[5] Sports offered at the school include rowing, rugby, ice hockey, squash, tennis, badminton, basketball, soccer, golf, volleyball, field hockey, and cross country. Shawnigan's sports rivalries include those with Brentwood College School, St. George's School, and St. Michaels University School.
From 2009 to 2013, Shawnigan's Boys First XV Rugby Team won an unprecedented five provincial championships in a row.
Shawnigan has produced more than 60 athletes who have competed at the senior international level.
Headmasters
| Year | Name |
|---|---|
| 1916–1952 | C. W. Lonsdale |
| 1952–1958 | G. Peter Kaye |
| 1958–1967 | Edward R. 'Ned' Larsen |
| 1967–1968 | Lachlan Patrick 'Pat' MacLachlan, acting |
| 1968 | Brian S. Powell |
| 1968–1972 | Lachlan Patrick 'Pat' MacLachlan |
| 1972 | The Rev. Canon William Hamilton Horace McClelland, M.B.E., acting |
| 1972–1975 | Hugh C. Wilkinson |
| 1975–1978 | The Rev. Canon William Hamilton Horace McClelland, M.B.E. |
| 1978–1983 | Darrell John Farrant |
| 1983–1984 | Derek William Hyde-Lay, acting |
| 1984–1989 | Douglas J. 'Doug' Campbell |
| 1989–1990 | Derek William Hyde-Lay |
| 1990–2000 | Simon C. Bruce-Lockhart |
| 2000–2018 | David Robertson |
| 2018–Present | Richard 'Larry' Lamont |
School athletic championships
Rowing |
||
|---|---|---|
| 2013 | Canadian Champions | Jr. Men's Eight |
| Jr. Men's Coxed Four | ||
| 2011 | Canadian Champions | Sr. Men's Lwt. Eight |
| Sr. Men's Lwt. Pair | ||
| 2010 | Canadian Champions | Sr. Women's Double |
| 2009 | Canadian Champions | Sr. Women's Eights |
| Sr. Men's Four | ||
| Jr. Women's Lwt. Pair | ||
| 2008 | Henley Royal Regatta | Princess Elizabeth Challenge Cup[6] |
| Canadian Champions | Sr. Men's Eight[7] | |
| Sr. Men's Four | ||
| 2007 | Canadian Champions | Jr. Men's Eights[8] |
| 2006 | Canadian Champions | Jr. Men's Eights[9] |
| 2005 | Canadian Champions | Sr. Women's Four[10] |
| Sr. Men's Four[10] | ||
| Sr. Men's Eight[10] | ||
| 2004 | Canadian Champions | Sr. Men's Four[11] |
| Sr. Women's Four[11] | ||
| Sr. Men's Eight[11] | ||
| 2003 | Canadian Champions | Jr. Men's Four[12] |
| 2002 | Canadian Champions | Sr. Women's Pair[13] |
| Jr. Men's Eights[13] | ||
| 2001 | Canadian Champions | Sr. Men's Four[14] |
(Note: championships exist pre-2001 to the founding.)
Rugby union
BC AA Girls Rugby Champions - 2023
BC Boys AAA Rugby Champions - 2022
BC Boys AAAA Rugby Champions – 2019
BC Boys AAAA Rugby Champions – 2017
BC Junior Boys AAA Rugby Champions – 2017
Junior Boys Rugby 7s Champions – 2016
BC Junior Boys AAA Rugby Champions – 2016
Senior Boys CAIS Rugby Champions – 2016
Girls CAIS Rugby Champions – 2016
BC Girls AA Rugby Champions – 2016
BC Boys AAAA Rugby Champions – 2016
BC Boys AAA Rugby Champions – 2015
BC Boys AAA Rugby Champions – 2013
BC Boys AAA Rugby Champions – 2012
BC Boys AAA Rugby Champions – 2011
BC Boys AAA Rugby Champions – 2010
BC Boys AAA Rugby Champions – 2009[15]
Boys CAIS National Rugby Champions – 2008[16]
BC Boys AAA Rugby Champions – 1998[17]
BC Girls AA Rugby Champions – 1997
BC Girls AA Rugby Champions – 1996
[18][19][15]
Field hockey
BC Girls AAA Sr. Field Hockey Champions – 2014
BC Girls AA Field Hockey Champions – 2011
Ice hockey
CSSHL Midget Varsity Champions – Boys' Midget Varsity – 2016
CSSHL Midget Varsity Champions – Boys' Midget Varsity – 2015
(Note: championships existed pre-1996 to the founding.)
Notable people
Notable alumni
Artists
- Mark Hobson - Artist [20]
- Robert Stewart Hyndman – Artist
- Peter Saul – Artist[21]
- Brendan Tang - Visual Artist, Judge on The Great Canadian Pottery Throw Down[22]
Athletes
- Eloise Blackwell – New Zealand Black Ferns captain (46 caps)[23]
- Brett Beukeboom – Rugby Canada captain (32 caps) and Cornish Pirates player
- Casey Crowley – New Zealand field hockey player (38 caps)
- Hannah Darling – 2016 Olympic bronze medalist, 2015 Pan American Games gold medalist, Rugby Canada player[24][25]
- Bryan Donnelly – Team Canada rower, 2000 Olympic Games[26]
- Eddie Evans – Rugby Canada player, prop for Canada national team, 1987, 1991, 1995 Rugby World Cups (50 caps)
- George Hungerford – 1964 Olympic gold medalist for Team Canada in the coxless pair[27]
- Josh Jackson – Rugby Canada player (22 caps) [28][29]
- John Lander – 1928 Olympic gold medalist for Great Britain in the coxless four
- John Lecky – 1960 Olympic silver medalist, eight[30]
- Kristopher McDaniel – 2005 & 2007 World Championship bronze medalist, coxless four and pair[31]
- Djustice Sears-Duru – Rugby Canada player (67 caps)[32]
Business
- Jim Shaw – CEO of Shaw Communications
Diplomats
- Anthony Vincent – Canadian Ambassador to Peru[33]
- M. John Sloan - Canadian Ambassador to Russia, Uzbekistan and Armenia [34]
Entertainment
- Jon Kimura Parker – Officer of the Order of Canada, concert pianist[35]
- Mike Little - Juno Award-winning musician [36]
- Noah Mills - Actor and Model
- Sophy Romvari - Film Director
- Tara Spencer-Nairn – Actress, Corner Gas[37]
Military
- Rear Admiral Richard H. Leir – Royal Canadian Navy
- Rear Admiral Michael G. Stirling – Royal Canadian Navy
- Lt.-Commander Cornelius Burke - Royal Canadian Navy[38]
- Lt.-Commander T.E. Ladner - Royal Canadian Navy[39]
- Lt.-Commander Douglas Maitland - Royal Canadian Navy[40]
Politics
- The Hon. Henry Pybus Bell-Irving – 23rd Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia[41]
- The Hon. Stephen D. Owen – Federal cabinet minister and Member of Parliament[42]
- The Hon. Nicholas Milliken – Alberta Minister of Infrastructure and Member of the Legislative Assembly
- Robert Murdoch - Private Secretary to Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau
- Peter Ladner – Vancouver City Councillor[43]
Scholars and scientists
- Graham Anderson – Scholar[44]
- Dr. Barry F. Cooper – Political Scientist[45]
- Dr. Steve Deering – Computer Scientist
- Dr. Roger Stanier – Microbiologist[46]
Notable staff
- Tom Brierley – Cricketer
- Nicholas Coghlan - Canadian Ambassador to South Sudan[47]
- Jennifer Manuel – Author, winner of the Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize (2017) and Geist Literal Literary Postcard Story Contest (2025), shortlisted for the 2025 CBC Poetry Prize[48]
- James Robertson Justice – Actor[citation needed]
- Laura Russell - Canadian national team rugby player [49]
- Leonard Wilde - Educator, Founder of Neuchâtel Junior College[50]
- Jeff Williams - Canadian national team rugby player[51]
Affiliations
- The Anglican Church of Canada, diocese of British Columbia
- CAIS – Canadian Accredited Independent Schools
- NAIS – National Association of Independent Schools
- TABS – The Association of Boarding Schools
- FISA BC – Federation of Independent School Associations in British Columbia
- ISABC – Independent Schools Association of BC

