Brockton High School (Toronto)

The Brockton property, located near Dufferin Mall,[1] is still owned by the Toronto District School Board, and the lot is under construction to be the future Bloor Collegiate Institute.

[7] On the afternoon of Wednesday, September 30, 1992 two gang attacks, involving male students traveling alone being beaten and stabbed, occurred.

Jim Rankin of the Toronto Star wrote that most students blamed "racist gangs" for causing issues at the school.

[2] Brockton was scheduled to close in the fall of 1995, with the campus converted into Ursula Franklin Academy, an academic school.

In October 2006, FoodShare, a non-profit community food security organization founded in 1985, also moved into the building, sharing space with the conservatory.

[1] At one point, the Conseil scolaire Viamonde leased Brockton to house its students from the overcrowded Le Collège français until it bought West Toronto Collegiate Institute in 2011.