Whistler Museum and Archives Society Museum Musings,Tales from Alta Lake Uphill Both Ways: Getting to School in Whistler

Uphill Both Ways: Getting to School in Whistler

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It is hard to imagine a time in Whistler when the only school in the area (a single room schoolhouse heated by a wood stove) struggled to remain open because it could not keep 10 students enrolled. But for many years, the community struggled to reach this threshold. Up until the 1970s, getting an education in the valley was far from easy, and getting to school required determination and a knack for ignoring the cold.

The first Alta Lake School. Philip Collection.

The first school opened in the 1930s. Prior to that, students could bring their correspondence work to the Alta Lake Hotel to be supervised, and also to see their peers. Once the Alta Lake School opened, attendance fluctuated from year to year (and was occasionally inflated), and it opened and closed accordingly. When the school was closed, children either returned to correspondence courses, or lived elsewhere in the province.

Students at the Alta Lake School, 1933. Jardine Collection.

For the children of Alta Lake, school provided most of their social interactions. Families were scattered throughout the valley, and before proper roads and cars came to the valley, traveling on foot was often the only option. In order to get to school, children sometimes had to walk for miles, mostly unattended, along operational railroad tracks. For some, the journey was shorter in the winter when it was possible to walk across the lakes. At times, the snow made it impossible to reach the school at all.

Bob Jardine, who was responsible for getting himself and his younger brother Tom Neiland to school, recalled that “Tom was four years younger than I was, so I was fourteen and he was ten… it used to terrify me to take him through the railway cuts, especially when the snow plow was galloping around there.”

After Whistler Mountain opened in 1966, the year-round population began to grow and the days of struggling to pull together 10 students were soon replaced with a constantly growing student population. The Alta Lake School closed permanently in 1970, and in 1976 Myrtle Philip Elementary School opened with 57 students.

Until the 1960s, students had to take correspondence courses once they reached grade 8 because the teacher was unqualified to teach past grade 7. But by 1966, the road to Whistler had been paved, and it was possible to bus highschool students to Squamish. At first, about ten students were bussed down the highway. The bus ride took over an hour, though for many the commute was significantly longer than that. The bus picked up students from the gas station in Creekside, but they had to make their own way there.

In an interview with the museum, Renate Bareham, who was part of the first group to attend highschool in Squamish, described it as “quite the trek.” It took her an hour to walk to the gas station and the drive to Squamish, especially during the first week, was harrowing. She recalled that “the road was very windy and for the first week of school I just about threw up everyday because we were in this little minivan… and we had to sit side-bench so I was not facing the road…” She added that “eventually I got over it and now I never get carsick.” She attended highschool in Squamish until she graduated in 1970. That was the last year they bussed students to Squamish. In 1969, buses went to both Squamish and Pemberton, and then highschool students were sent to Pemberton, continuing until Whistler Secondary School opened in 1996

Upgrade! Bob Walker, the first bus driver, stands next to the new and improved school bus in the late 1960s. Philip Collection.
Whistler’s first school bus, circa late 1960s. Philip Collection.

3 thoughts on “Uphill Both Ways: Getting to School in Whistler”

  1. Hi, what a lovely article. Just want to make a couple of corrections. My first name has an e on the end, not an a. Not really a problem, many people misspell it. I actually graduated in 1970. During the 1969 1970 school year, a bus went to Squamish and one went to Pemberton. I went to Squamish because it was my last year and I wanted to graduate with my friends. If you have any questions, please call me, or email.

  2. In the early 1960s the school solved the problem of having a minimum number of students by hiring as teacher Mr. Carrico, who if I recall correctly, had 7 children of his own. I palled around in the summers with his son Robbie, who was my age.

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