St. Paul's School (New Hampshire): Difference between revisions
Ken Gallager (talk | contribs) Undid revision 349859671 by 24.224.117.214 (talk) - already in list |
m →External links: Bears no relation to the school |
||
Line 218: | Line 218: | ||
* [http://www.ramsa.com/project.aspx?id=117 Page on the Ohrstrom Library by the firm that designed it] |
* [http://www.ramsa.com/project.aspx?id=117 Page on the Ohrstrom Library by the firm that designed it] |
||
* [http://www.boardingschoolreview.com/school_ov/school_id/19 Boarding School Review] |
* [http://www.boardingschoolreview.com/school_ov/school_id/19 Boarding School Review] |
||
* [http://www.artsanctuary.org/ Alumna Lorraine Cary's Art Sanctuary] |
|||
==References== |
==References== |
Revision as of 22:57, 4 April 2010
43°11′41″N 71°34′35″W / 43.19472°N 71.57639°W
- This is about St. Paul's School in the United States. For other schools with the same name, see the disambiguation page.
St. Paul's School | |
---|---|
Seal of St. Paul's | |
Location | |
, | |
Information | |
Type | Private, Boarding |
Motto | Ea discamus in terris quorum scientia perseveret in coelis (Let us learn those things on Earth the knowledge of which continues in Heaven) |
Religious affiliation(s) | Episcopal |
Established | 1856 |
Rector | Bill Matthews '61 |
Faculty | 106 total |
Enrollment | 524 boarding |
Average class size | 11 students |
Student to teacher ratio | 5:1 |
Campus | Rural, 2000 acres (8 km²) |
Color(s) | Red & White |
Athletics | 17 interscholastic, 8 club |
Athletics conference | ISL |
Mascot | Pelican |
Endowment | $442 million[citation needed] |
Website | http://www.sps.edu/ |
St. Paul's School is a private, college-preparatory, coeducational boarding school in Concord, New Hampshire affiliated with the Episcopal Church. It was founded in 1856 by George Cheyne Shattuck, Jr.. The 2,000-acre (8 km2) New Hampshire campus currently serves 533 students. The school became co-educational in 1971 and is one of only six remaining 100% residential boarding schools in the U.S. The student body hails from all over the United States and the world.
St. Paul's is a member of the Eight Schools Association, begun informally in 1973-74 and formalized in 2006. St. Paul's is also a member of the Ten Schools Admissions Organization, founded in 1966. There is a seven-school overlap of membership between the two groups.[1]
St. Paul's is, in addition, a member of the Independent School League, the oldest independent school athletic association in the United States.
History
In 1856, Harvard-educated Boston Brahmin and physician George Cheyne Shattuck turned his country home in New Hampshire into a school for boys which included his two sons. Shattuck wanted his boys educated in the austere but bucolic countryside. A newly-appointed board of trustees chose Henry Coit, a 24-year old clergyman, to preside over the school for its first 39 years.[2]
Throughout the latter half of the 19th century, the school expanded. In 1884, it built the first squash courts in America. During the infancy of ice hockey in the United States, the school established itself as a powerhouse that often played and beat collegiate teams at Harvard and Yale. See the Athletics section.[3] Its Lower School Pond once held nine hockey rinks.
In 1910, Samuel Drury took over as rector. Drury, who had served as missionary in the Philippines, found St. Paul’s in almost all aspects – student body, faculty, and curriculum – severely lacking the serious commitment to academic pursuits and moral upstandingness. Accordingly, he presided over, among other things, the hiring of better teachers, the tightening of academic standards, and the dissolution of secret societies and their replacement with a student council. Drury also presided over the school throughout the 1920s and 1930s during what August Hecksher called the school's “Augustan era.”[4]
Thirty years later, the 1960s ushered in a turbulent period for St. Paul’s. In 1968, students wrote an acerbic manifesto describing the school administration as an oppressive regime. As a result of this manifesto, seated meals were reduced from three times a day to four times a week, courses were shortened to be terms (rather than years) long, Chapel was reduced to four times a week, and the school's grading system was changed to eliminate + and - grades and given its current High Honors, Honors, High Pass, Pass, and Unsatisfactory labels instead of A-F.[5] By the end of the sixties, St. Paul’s had begun to admit sizable numbers of minorities in every class, had secularized its previously strict religious schedule considerably, expanded its course offerings, and was poised to begin coeducation. It admitted girls for the first time in 1971.[6]
A new library — designed by Robert A. M. Stern and Carroll Cline[7] — opened in 1991; a $24 million gym[8] opened in 2004. The school celebrated its 150th anniversary in 2006.
Millville
The school's rural 2000 acre (8 km²) campus is familiarly known as "Millville", after a now-abandoned mill whose relic still stands in the woods near the Lower School Pond. The overwhelming majority of the land comprises wild and wooded areas. The campus itself includes four ponds and the upper third of the Turkey River.
There are 18 dorms, nine boys' and nine girls', which each house between 20 and 40 students and are vertically integrated: every dorm has members of all four classes. The architecture of the dormitories varies from the collegiate Gothic style of the "Quad" dorms (built in 1927)[9] to the spare, modern style of the Kittredge building (built in the early seventies).[10]
Classes are held in six buildings: language and humanities classes meet in the Schoolhouse; math classes in Moore; science classes in Payson; visual arts in Hargate; music and ballet classes in the Oates Performing Arts Center; and theater classes, in the New Space black box theater. The Schoolhouse, Moore and Payson form a quadrangle, along with Memorial Hall, the 600-seat theater used for all school gatherings not suited to the chapel space.
The Ohrstrom library houses some 70,000 books[11] and overlooks the Lower School Pond. Perhaps the focal point of the campus is the Chapel of St. Peter and St. Paul, constructed in the late 19th century, also known as the New Chapel.
Daily life
St. Paul's operates on a six-day school week, Monday through Saturday. Wednesdays and Saturdays, however, are half-days, with athletic games or practices in the afternoons. The school has four grades, known at St. Paul's as "forms": "Third Form", which corresponds to ninth grade, up through "Sixth Form", which corresponds to twelfth grade.
For Paulies, as St. Paul's students are colloquially known, the four full days each week begin with Chapel. The mandatory interfaith half-hour meeting involves a reading, speech or music presentation, and community-wide announcements.
St. Paul's conducts most of its classes using the Harkness method, which encourages discussion between students and the teacher, and between students. The average class size according to the School's website is 10-12 students.
Rather than having physical education classes, St. Paul's requires all its students to play sports. These sports range from internationally competing crew team to intramural hockey.
Twice a week, students attend seated meal, at which formal attire is required. Seven students and a faculty member are randomly assigned to each table for a family-style dinner, and the table is excused only after everyone has eaten.
In the evenings, meetings are held for clubs and activities, music ensembles like the Chorus and Band, theater rehearsals, a cappella groups (the all-male Testostertones, the all-female Mad Hatters, and the co-ed Deli Line), the Debate Team, and other extracurriculars.
Traditions
St Paul's is home to many long-standing traditions. Near the start of the school year, the Rector announces a surprise holiday – Cricket Holiday – in morning Chapel. Classes are canceled for the day and the Rector leads new students and faculty on a tour of the woods surrounding the School. The tradition dates back to the first Rector, Henry Augustus Coit, who preferred cricket over baseball as a "more refined sport".
During February, the Missionary Society (the school's community service organization) plans and announces Mish Holiday. The holiday is announced the day before, the evening is given over to a theme dance, and the next day is a day off from school. The Missionary Society has used extravagant stunts to announce the holiday, including, in recent years, fireworks over the Lower School Pond and a plane trailing a "Happy Mish!" banner.
Students who participate in club sports (intramural) at St. Paul's are assigned to one of three teams for their time at St. Paul's—"Isthmian," "Delphian" or "Old Hundred". Students also are assigned to one of two "Boat Clubs""—"Halcyon" or "Shattuck". If a descendant of a graduate attends the school, she or he is assigned to the same clubs as her or his relative.
The annual Inter-House Inter-Club Race, known among students as the Dorm Run or now called The Charles B. Morgan Run, takes place late in Fall Term, usually in early to mid-November. Students are invited to earn points for their dorm and club by running in a 2-mile (3.2 km) cross country race. The current student record is 9:48, set in 2006 by Peter Harrison '07.[12]
During a weekend in the Fall Term, the Student Council holds Fall Ball, a dinner/dance formal. Each dorm's prefects set their new students up with seniors of the opposite sex from other dorms.
During the Winter Term, the school holds the annual Fiske Cup Competition. Each participating dorm produces a student-directed and -performed play. Most plays are held in dorm common rooms. Recent winning productions have been The Bible Abridged, The Full Monty, and A Few Good Men.
In the Spring, the school holds a school-wide public speaking contest called the Hugh Camp Cup. The finalists' speeches are delivered before the entire school, and the student body votes on a winner, whose name is engraved on the prize. Alumnus John Kerry achieved this distinction during his sixth form year.[13]
On the last night of the term, students gather in the Chapel at 9 p.m. for the Last Night service. At the Last Night service for Spring Term, the last night of school before summer vacation, the faculty lines up outside the Chapel after the service and students shake hands with every member as they exit. On the Sixth Formers' last night on campus, they gather as a class in the Old Chapel. At the conclusion of the service, the rest of the student body waits outside to congratulate them and say their goodbyes.
During Anniversary Weekend, held on the first weekend of June, alumni converge on the school for get-togethers, reunions, and the annual Alumni Parade. Each form (class) marches down Chapel Road in chronological order, starting with the oldest living alumni. In the back of this long column is the about-to-graduate Sixth Form.
St. Paul's students once had a close relationship with jam bands like the Grateful Dead. Some of the lingo peculiar to St. Paul's originated as the "Pyramid Dialect" among St. Paul's students and alumni who went on tour with the Grateful Dead.[14] Phish played in the Upper Dining Hall on May 19, 1990.[15]
Athletics
Malcolm Gordon coached ice hockey at the school for 29 years, and noted World War I fighter pilot Hobey Baker played under him. The world's first squash courts outside the UK were built at St. Paul’s in 1884.[16][17]
St. Paul's was an early cradle for ice hockey in America.[18] By some accounts, the first hockey game in the United States between students was played on the ponds at St. Paul's in 1883.[13][19][20] The school was an established leader in the sport in the early twentieth century, playing and beating collegiate teams, including Harvard[21] and Princeton.[22]
St. Paul's crew won the Princess Elizabeth Challenge Cup in the Henley Royal Regatta in 1980, 1994[23] and again in 2004.[24]
Notable alumni
- Norman Armour SPS Form of 1905, US ambassador
- John Jacob Astor IV, member of the Astor family who died on the RMS Titanic
- Hobey Baker 1909, collegiate hockey player and World War I pilot
- E. Digby Baltzell 1932, sociologist responsible for popularizing the term WASP
- Charles Best 1994, founder of Donorschoose.org
- Roland Betts 1964, CEO of Chelsea Piers Ltd and major Republican Party contributor
- Marshall Latham Bond, owner of sled dog inspiration of Jack London's The Call of the Wild
- Daniel Baugh Brewster, United States Senator from Maryland
- Lorene Cary 1974, author of Black Ice, an autobiography detailing her experiences with the school; founder of Art Sanctuary in Philadelphia
- Parker Corning 1893, US Congressman from New York
- Archibald Cox 1930, Watergate Special Prosecutor
- Nick Craw 1955, Executive Director of the Peace Corps
- Clarence Day 1892, humorist, author, and playwright
- Alexis Denisof, television, film and stage actor (Angel, Buffy the Vampire Slayer)
- Harmar D. Denny, Jr., US Congressman from Pennsylvania
- A. Peter Dewey, first American casualty in Vietnam
- Charles S. Dewey, US Congressman
- Marshall Dodge 1953, Yankee humorist
- Annie Duke, Tournament poker champion, winner of the World Series of Poker Tournament of Champions (2004)
- Thomas A. Edison, Jr. 1895, son of the inventor Thomas Edison
- John Franklin Enders 1915, Nobel laureate in physiology/medicine
- Timothy Ferriss, entrepreneur and best selling author of The 4-Hour Workweek
- Hamilton Fish Jr. 1890, first American to die in the Spanish-American War while charging San Juan Hill
- James Rudolph Garfield, U.S. politician, son of US President James A. Garfield
- Jeff Giuliano 1998, National Hockey League (NHL) player
- Malcolm Gordon 1887, member of the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame
- Kevin Gover 1974, Director of the Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian, former Assistant Secretary of the Interior for Indian Affairs
- J. Peter Grace 1932, industrialist and sportsman
- Frank Tracy Griswold III 1955, 25th Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church
- A. R. Gurney 1948, American playwright and novelist
- Jeff Halpern 1994, NHL player
- Edward Harkness 1893, philanthropist after whom the Harkness table is named
- Huntington Hartford 1929, A&P heir, graduated after 8 years
- William Randolph Hearst 1881, newspaper publisher (didn't graduate)
- Amory Houghton Sr. 1917, US Ambassador to France
- Amory "Amo" Houghton Jr. 1945, former member of the US House of Representatives (R-NY) and former CEO of Corning Glass Works
- Clement Hurd 1926, author and illustrator of children's books, including Goodnight Moon
- John G. W. Husted, Jr., first fiancé of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis
- Andrew John Kauffman 1934, one of only two Americans to complete the first ascent of an 8,000 meter peak (Gasherbrum I)
- Rich Keefe 2002, radio personality for Sports Radio WGAM The Game
- Michael Kennedy 1976, son of Robert F. Kennedy
- John Kerry 1962, U.S. Senator (D-MA) and 2004 Democratic presidential nominee
- Alan Khazei, founder of City Year
- James W. Kinnear 1946, former President & CEO, Texaco, Inc.
- Benjamin Kunkel, author and critic
- Beirne Lay, Jr. 1927, author and writer, Twelve O'Clock High
- Howard Lederer, Tournament poker champion, winner of two World Series of Poker titles, and two World Poker Tour titles
- John Lindsay 1940, U.S. Congressman, former Mayor of New York City
- Minoru Bernard Makihara 1950, former CEO, Mitsubishi Corporation
- Michel McQueen Martin 1976, journalist for ABC and NPR
- Burnet Maybank III 1974, lawyer, author, and first head of the South Carolina Department of Revenue
- Ian McKee, winner of the second season of The Bachelorette
- Rick Moody 1979, novelist, author of The Ice Storm
- Paul Moore, Jr. 1937, 13th Episcopal Bishop of New York
- William Moore 1933, president and chairman of the board, Bankers Trust
- J. P. Morgan, Jr. 1884, banker and philanthropist
- Samuel Eliot Morison, author, Pulitzer Prize winner, and Harvard professor
- Robert Mueller 1962, current director of the FBI
- Philip Neal 1986, principal dancer for the New York City Ballet
- Judd Nelson 1978, actor, The Breakfast Club, Making the Grade
- Catherine Oxenberg 1979, actress
- Maxwell Perkins 1903, noted editor at Charles Scribner and Sons, editor of F. Scott Fitzgerald
- Lewis Thompson Preston 1944, President of the World Bank
- Jonathan Reckford 1980, CEO of Habitat for Humanity
- Whitelaw Reid, Jr., 1931, Chairman of the New York Herald Tribune and the Fresh Air Fund
- Edmund Maurice Burke Roche, 4th Baron Fermoy 1905, Conservative MP, British Peer, and maternal grandfather of Diana, Princess of Wales
- Charles Scribner III 1909, President of Charles Scribner's Sons
- Roger Shattuck, Proust scholar
- Don Sweeney 1984, NHL player
- Anson Phelps Stokes II, 1896, philanthropist and Secretary of Yale University
- Anson Phelps Stokes III 1922, Episcopal Bishop of Massachusetts
- Edward L. Stokes, Congressman (R) from Pennsylvania
- William Howard Taft IV 1962, Deputy Secretary of Defense, NATO Ambassador
- William Davis Taylor 1950, publisher of The Boston Globe
- Augusta Read Thomas, composer of orchestral music; Chair of the Board of the American Music Center
- Sir Henry Worth Thornton, President, Canadian National Railway; Vanderbilt University football coach 1894; knighted by George V
- Garry Trudeau 1966, Pulitzer Prize-winning Doonesbury cartoonist
- Cornelius Vanderbilt III
- James Vanderbilt 1994, Hollywood screenwriter
- Sam von Trapp, Vice President of Special Projects at the Trapp Family Lodge.
- Sheldon Whitehouse 1973, U.S. Senator (D-RI)
- John Gilbert Winant 1909, twice Governor of New Hampshire, U.S. Ambassador to the United Kingdom during World War II
- Owen Wister, American writer
- Alan "Scooter" Zackheim 2001, winner of the third season of Beauty and the Geek
- Efrem Zimbalist, Jr. 1936, film and television actor
Notable faculty
- Gerry Studds, who later served as U.S. Congressman from Massachusetts
- Richard Lederer, English teacher and compiler of humorous errors in the use of the English language
See also
- Boarding school
- St. Grottlesex, a colloquial expression for several of the area's prep schools
External links
- St. Paul's School website
- St. Paul's School admissions video on SchoolFair.tv
- Ohrstrom Library's page celebrating St. Paul's School's Sesquicentennial (150 year anniversary) with history and historical photographs
- Page on the Ohrstrom Library by the firm that designed it
- Boarding School Review
References
- ^ Taylor Smith, "History of the Association," The Phillipian, February 14, 2008; Tim Ghosh and Charles Shoener, "Eight Schools Association Convenes At PA," The Phillipian, April 24, 2008
- ^ Hecksher, August. A Brief History of St. Paul's: 1856-1996. Concord, New Hampshire: The Board of Trustees of St. Paul's School, © 1996.
- ^ Ibid.
- ^ Ibid.
- ^ SPS Sesquicentennial Exhibit
- ^ Hecksher, August. A Brief History of St. Paul's: 1856-1996. Concord, New Hampshire: The Board of Trustees of St. Paul's School, © 1996.
- ^ New York Times: 'Carol Cline, 72; Added Light to Architecture', 27 Feb 2000
- ^ New York Times: 'Turmoil Grips Elite School Over Money and Leaders 21 Nov 2004
- ^ Stern, Robert A.M. 'The Architecture of St. Paul's School and the Design of the Ohrstrom Library'
- ^ Ibid.
- ^ 'Academics: Ohrstrom Library' from the school's website
- ^ SPS Today: 'School Pride Shows in Annual Club/House Race', 15 Nov 2007
- ^ a b New York Times: 'Prep School Peers Found Kerry Talented, Ambitious and Apart', 16 May 2004
- ^ Shenk, D. and Silberman, S. Skeleton Key. Main Street Books, 1994
- ^ Mockingbird Setlists: Phish 1990
- ^ US Squash's history of the game
- ^ James Zug: 'Barking Elbows: The First Squash Courts in America'
- ^ New York Times: 'A Skating Rink/Boxing Ring, And a Wild and Crazy Facade', 6 Feb 2005
- ^ SPS Today: 'NH Hockey Legends Celebrates School's Role in Sport's History', 29 Mar 2006
- ^ Concord Insider: 'Visit "the cradle of American hockey"', 11 Dec 2007
- ^ New York Times: 'St. Paul's Beats Harvard at Hockey', 12 Feb 1908
- ^ New York Times: 'SCHOOLBOY SEVEN OUTPLAYS NASSAUS; St. Paul's Hockey Team Scores Victory by 9 to 1 at St. Nicholas Rink', 21 December 1917
- ^ New York Times: '1994 THE YEAR IN REVIEW; From Archery to Paddleball to Yachting, Winners All', 1 Jan 1995
- ^ Henley Royal Regatta results
- Education navigational templates
- Boarding schools in New Hampshire
- High schools in New Hampshire
- Private schools in New Hampshire
- Independent School League
- Episcopal schools in the United States
- Preparatory schools in New Hampshire
- Buildings and structures in Concord, New Hampshire
- Educational institutions established in 1856
- St. Paul's School (New Hampshire) alumni
- Schools in Merrimack County, New Hampshire