Home Information About Leslie Frost
Track & Field

Track & Field

School News

Go Lions!

May 15, 2012 - Track and Field for all Junior and Intermediate students will be held tomorrow (Wed., May 16).…

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Pedal for Hope 2012 at Leslie Frost!

Pedal for Hope 2012 at Leslie Frost!

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Support for Paediatric Cancer

April 30, 2012 - There were smiles, tears, and laughter today at Leslie Frost P.S. as the Pedal for Hope…

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Spring Fling 2012

Spring Fling 2012

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Come out for some friendly, family fun!

April 2, 2012 - Spring Fling will be held on May 17 with a rain date of May 22.  There…

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Receive Leslie Frost's Newsletter & Calendar by Email

Receive Leslie Frost's Newsletter & Calendar by Email

Please register for Leslie Frost's monthly e-newsletter.

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Spirit Week at Leslie Frost!

Spirit Week at Leslie Frost!

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Go Lions!

April 20, 2012 - Guess what Lions? During the week of April 23-27, the Student Council and the Me to…

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Earth Day 2012 at Leslie Frost

Earth Day 2012 at Leslie Frost

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How will YOU help the environment?

April 13, 2012 - Leslie Frost will celebrate Earth Day on Friday, April 20th. We will view a video featuring…

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Junior-Mixed Basketball Team Competes Today at the County Tournament

Junior-Mixed Basketball Team Competes Today at the County Tournament

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Tagline

April 19, 2012 - All the best to our Junior-Mixed Basketball Team as they compete at the County Basketball Tournament…

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Snuggle Up and Read at Leslie Frost

Snuggle Up and Read at Leslie Frost

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An evening of family reading and fun.

April 18, 2012 - This evening, many of our Kindergarten and Grade 1 students and their familes attended Leslie Frost's…

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Hands-on Learning in Math

Hands-on Learning in Math

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Designing petting zoos in math!

March 6, 2012 - Students in Mrs. Kitchen's & Mme Tripp's grade 4 class were having fun learning math skills…

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Creating Textures and Rhythm in Art

Creating Textures and Rhythm in Art

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Mrs. Ayres' Art Class

Mar. 5, 2012 - Our grade 7 students were practising their artistic skills today by mixing paints and using a…

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Receive LFPS News Updates on Twitter

Receive LFPS News Updates on Twitter

Quick & concise communication with our school community.

You can now get news updates by following Leslie Frost P.S. on Twitter, @LeslieFrostPS.

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Keeping Fit with the Skipping Club

Keeping Fit with the Skipping Club

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This year's club is in full swing!

March 5, 2012 - Our Skipping Club, led by Mrs. Medhurst and Mrs. Seidel, is in full swing. This club…

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All Students Attending TLAC 2012

All Students Attending TLAC 2012

School News

The countdown is on!

All students who applied for Trillium Lakelands Arts Camp (TLAC) have been accepted this year!  Successful candidates for counsellors and…

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Yearbooks Are Now On Sale!

Yearbooks Are Now On Sale!

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Get yours now!

Feb. 1, 2012 - Yearbooks sales have begun! The fee for the book is $25.00. Attention parents:  we are looking…

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About LFPS

We are committed to helping students become the best they can be in a safe and caring learning environment.

Leslie Frost P.S. is a JK-8 school that offers both French Immersion and English programs.

School Motto

"Giving students roots and wings."

After Graduation

Students graduating from Lesliel Frost P.S. continue their studies at either Central Senior P.S. (English Program after grade 6) or I.E. Weldon S.S. (French Immersion Program after grade 8). Visit their websites:

History

newspaper1

    Read the complete article here.


    Leslie M. Frost: Biography

    Leslie M. Frost (September 20, 1895 - May 4, 1973) was Premier of Ontario from 1949 to 1961. First elected in 1937 to the Ontario legislature representing Victoria-Haliburton, he was known as "The Laird of Lindsay." He combined small town values with progressive policies to lead the province through the economic boom of the 1950s.

    Leslie M. Frost: Early Years

    Leslie_Frost1Born in Orillia, Ontario, he was the son of William Sword Frost and Margaret Jane Barker. His father was a jeweller and mayor of Orillia; his mother was an important figure in the early days of The Salvation Army. He attended the University of Toronto and Osgoode Hall Law School. During World War I, he was an officer with "C"Company 157th Battalion (Simcoe Foresters), CEF, and served with the 20th Battalion, Queen's York Rangers in France and Belgium. In 1918, after being wounded, he was discharged with the rank of Captain. He was called to the Bar in 1921.

In 1926, he married Gertrude Jane Carew. They had no children. The couple lived in Lindsay, Ontario, but Frost preferred his property at Pleasant Point on Sturgeon Lake north of Lindsay. When Frost and his brother, Cecil Gray Frost, first moved to Lindsay to establish a law practice, they rented a building at Pleasant Point that had been the community store and commuted to town by steamer. Frost bought the property in 1925 and, in about 1950, bought adjacent property where he built the winterized log cabin that was his refuge while he was premier and in retirement.

Leslie_Frost2Political CareerIn 1937, he was first elected to the Ontario legislature and thereafter never lost an election. He was the Treasurer of Ontario and Minister of Mines from 1943 to 1955. Frost was chosen as leader of the Ontario Progressive Conservative Party following Premier George Drew's decision to enter federal politics. Dubbed "Old Man Ontario" and "The Laird of Lindsay", Frost led the province during the economic boom of the 1950s. His low key approach garnered him the nickname "The Great Tranquilizer". Combining small town values with progressive policies, he took the Tories through three successive electoral victories winning majority governments in 1951, 1955 and 1959.

Frost's government oversaw great expansion in the role of government. Under his leadership, Ontario greatly expanded its schools, highways and hospitals. His government substantially increased public investment in the economy, as well as through strong fiscal policies. and under his leadership Ontario created the 400 series of superhighways, most notably the Macdonald-Cartier Freeway better known as Highway 401. His government also attempted to wrest control of the income tax from the federal government, but failed, resulting in the introduction of a provincial sales tax. The Frost government introduced public hospital insurance to the province which would be expanded by his successors to become the modern OHIP system of medicare.

Leslie_Frost3His government oversaw substantial expansion in public services. The number of universities in Ontario increased from four to twelve. As finance minister in 1943, the total provincial investment in education was just over $13 million. Upon his retirement in 1961, the education budget for Ontario was $250 million.

The government of Leslie Frost was the first to pass laws providing penalties for racial, ethnic, and gender discrimination on private property; these laws, introduced in the early 1950s as the Fair Employment Practices Act and Fair Accommodation Practices Act, started a movement in Ontario politics that produced the Ontario Human Rights Code in 1962 and later legislation. Frost's government also introduced legislation to ensure women received equal wages. His government also introduced voting rights for Indians.

Frost's government oversaw the federation of the old City of Toronto with twelve surrounding municipalities to become Metropolitan Toronto.

Frost resigned in 1961, and was succeeded as Tory leader and Premier by John Robarts.

Retirement

Upon retirement from politics, Frost served on the Board of Governors of the University of Toronto. As well, he was a member of the Board of Directors of the Bank of Montreal, KVP, Canada Life, and Trans Canada Air. He served as Chancellor of Trent University from 1967 to 1973. In retirement, he continued his interest in the outdoors. Near the end of his life, he undertook for the government of Ontario an exhaustive investigation of the state and potential of Algonquin Provincial Park. In the last interview he gave, just before he died, to the Toronto Star, he declared: "I am an environmentalist."

Frost was an excellent amateur historian. His book Fighting Men covered the history of the 35th Regiment of Simcoe Foresters from Orillia, Ontario in the context of the First World War. Within that he connects the Canadian home front to the war front in France, and connects the events within the regiment to the bigger picture of the war and Canada's subsequent role in world affairs. His Forgotten Pathways of the Trent (published just after he died) challenged historians' previous conclusions about Indian trade and warfare routes in southern Ontario. He was an avid U.S. Civil War buff and kept on the mantelpiece in his large library a piece of wood that was supposed to have come from Abraham Lincoln's original log cabin.

Source: Wikipedia