About Us
 
Our History


The Fredericton YMCA has been an important part of life in our city since before Confederation.  First organized in 1858, the Fredericton Y has grown from a handful of “forward thinking citizens” meeting in a small room at City Hall to today’s multi-million dollar facility drawing thousands of active participants.

The Y traces its origins to the Industrial Revolution in England and the concern of George Williams (later Sir George Williams) that Christian values and standards were being threatened by a changing society.  Williams was only 23 years old, but the movement he began in 1844 quickly spread to the mainland of Europe, then to Canada in 1851, and to Fredericton seven years later. [read more]

YMCA History



Incorporated by an act of the New Brunswick Legislature in 1875, the YMCA was a modest organization in Fredericton until the 1890s when a concerted effort was made to strengthen it.  In 1895, a ladies auxiliary was formed, a “secretary” was hired, and quarters were found on Queen Street. 

Three years later, the Y purchased its first building, on York Street, and the local movement thrived until 1922 when, unfortunately, the facility was lost to fire.
 
In the 1930s, community members worked to re-establish the YMCA, and, following a successful financial campaign, the Y was once more providing a wide array of programs.

The YMCA and YWCA–until then separate institutions in Fredericton–amalgamated in the 1940s and relocated to King Street before moving a few years later to a building on the corner of York and Brunswick Streets.  (In 1996, the Fredericton Y disaffiliated from the YWCA because of financial considerations.)

The current YMCA building dates back to 1962.  Successful fund-raising drives in 1964, 1979, 1982, 1994, and 1998 financed $4.8 million in renovations and additions to the original building and permitted the Y to broaden its programs.

Today, the YMCA serves over 11,000 individuals each year and operates in over 20 outreach sites throughout the city as well as from its main building at 28 Saunders St.

 History Part 2