Canadian Forces College

Summary

The Canadian Forces College (CFC) is a military staff college for senior and general officers of the Canadian Armed Forces. It provides graduate-level military education courses designed to develop leadership abilities within the Canadian Forces in a whole-of-government framework. The CFC campus is located at 215 Yonge Boulevard, on the north side of Wilson Avenue in the Armour Heights neighborhood of Toronto, Ontario.

Canadian Forces College
Entry gates to the CFC campus
TypeStaff college
Established1943 (as the Royal Canadian Air Force War Staff College)
Location, ,
Canada

43°44′31″N 79°24′50″W / 43.742°N 79.414°W / 43.742; -79.414
AffiliationsRMC PPC, DRDC, OCGS
Websitecfc.forces.gc.ca

History edit

The institution was established in 1943 as the Royal Canadian Air Force War Staff College. The site was originally a property named Strathrobyn that was owned by real estate developer Frederick Burton Robins (1866–1948),[1] and the centrepiece was a large Tudor Revival mansion which was built around 1914 pursuant to a design by the architectural firm of George & Moorhouse.[2] The estate was renamed as Glenalton after it was purchased in 1926 for $175,000 by businessman Albert Leroy Ellsworth (1876–1950),[3] who had founded the British American Oil Company in 1906. Ellsworth used the property as his residence until about 1942, at which point the Royal Canadian Air Force rented it from him to use as a wartime staff college.[4] In the autumn of 1945, the Government of Canada bought the estate from Ellsworth for $103,500.[3]

In 1945, the college was re-designated as the Royal Canadian Air Force Staff College, which became a component of the Air Force College in 1962. The Air Force College also included a Headquarters, a Staff School and an Extension School. Following integration of the Canadian Armed Forces, the college was renamed as the Canadian Forces College (CFC) in 1966. The Tudor Revival mansion containing the Officers' Mess was designated a "Recognized Federal Heritage Building" by the Canadian government in 1991.[5]

The Canadian Forces Staff School for junior officers, formerly located at 1107 Avenue Road, was determined to be redundant and closed in 1994. That property was later sold to the Metropolitan Separate School Board (now called the Toronto Catholic District School Board), and it re-opened in 1998 as Marshall McLuhan Catholic Secondary School.

 
Commemoration memorial of the Canadian Forces College
 
The Canadian Forces College's ex-AETE CF-104 Starfighter
 
The Canadian Forces College's Lynx Reconnaissance Vehicle

Curriculum edit

The programmes at the College are designed to “provide high-quality professional military education for selected Canadian and international officers[.]”[6][7] The curriculum includes military doctrine, exercise and simulation, and the command, control, and administration of allocated personnel and financial resources. Instruction is bilingual and students are permitted to present written deliverables in the language of their choice.[8] The instution maintains a partnership with the Royal Military College of Canada as well as liaisons with many other national and foreign educational institutions.

Programmes edit

  • Joint Command and Staff Programme (JCSP)
  • National Security Programme (NSP)
  • Joint Command and Staff Programme Distance Learning (JCSP DL)
  • Joint Staff Operations Programme (JSOP)
  • Canadian Security Studies Programme (CSSP)
  • Executive Leaders' Programme (ELP)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Strathrobyn". Toronto Public Library. Retrieved 3 August 2023.
  2. ^ "See listing for No. 215 Yonge Boulevard". Proposed Additions to the Inventory of Heritage Properties. City of Toronto Council. Retrieved 12 August 2023.
  3. ^ a b "Armour Heights Officers' Mess – Constitution and By-laws" (PDF). Canadian Forces College. p. 38. Retrieved 12 August 2023.
  4. ^ "Gates of Glenalton". Architectural Conservancy Ontario. Retrieved 11 August 2023.
  5. ^ "Armour Heights College". Directory of Federal Heritage Designations. Retrieved 1 November 2016.
  6. ^ "Vision or Hallucination: A Glidepath to Excellence for the Canadian Forces College" (PDF).
  7. ^ Canadian Forces College (2007). Transformation Campaign Plan. A Blueprint for the Future, Version 2. Canadian Forces College.
  8. ^ Benwell, Lieutenant Colonel N.R. "Vision or Hallucination: A Glidepath to Excellence for the Canadian Forces College" (PDF). Canadian Forces Defence College. 2015–2016: 27, 63.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Canadian Forces College luncheon talk given at The Royal Canadian Military Institute on 20 Sep. 2011