Episcopal High School (Alexandria, Virginia)
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Episcopal High School | |
Fortiter, fideliter, feliciter "Strongly, faithfully, joyfully" |
|
Established | 1839 |
School type | Private Preparatory Boarding School |
Religious affiliation | Episcopalian |
Headmaster | F. Robertson Hershey |
Campus | City, 135 acres (.55 km²) 26 buildings |
Enrollment | 420 |
Faculty | 80 |
Average class size | 11 |
Student:teacher ratio |
7:1 |
Average SAT scores (2005) |
629 verbal 647 math |
Athletics | 17 Interscholastic Sports |
Color(s) | Maroon and Black |
Mascot | Maroon |
Conference | IAC |
Episcopal High School is a private boarding school located in Alexandria, Virginia. Founded in 1839, it has just over 400 students from around the world on its 526,000 m² (130 acre) campus. The current headmaster is F. Robertson Hershey, appointed in 1998.
Out of the approximately 420 students attending, 77% are White, 9% are African American, 3% are Hispanic and 8% are Asian or Pacific Islanders, and 3% are multi-racial. Male students comprise 55% of the population, female students 45%. The school has a student to teacher ratio of 6:1 compared to the state average of 12.654:1.
Episcopal does not take day students. It is the only "all-boarding" school in the United States located in a metropolitan area.[1]
Contents |
[edit] History
According to its web site: "As the first high school in Virginia, Episcopal became known throughout the South as "The High School", a name by which it is still known today."
The high school was used as a union army hospital during the American Civil War; this was the only time in the school's history that it was ever closed down. Poet Walt Whitman supposedly served as a nurse on the high school's campus at this time[citation needed].
The school became co-educational in 1991.
It was once known as the Howard School, and some buildings still bear an insignia that has that name.
Although known throughout the region as the first high school in Virginia, Episcopal's student body has become more diverse in recent years. The most represented states are Virginia, North Carolina and Texas, but students come from 29 other states and 18 countries.
Episcopal's sports teams are known as the Maroon. The school is part of the longest running rivalry in high school football with Woodberry Forest School, competing with Woodberry every year since 1901. To the students at the two schools, the annual football game is known as The Game.
[edit] Honor code
Episcopal's Honor Code is one of the oldest among secondary schools in the United States, and it forms the cornerstone of school life. The Honor Code consists of four parts:
- I will not lie.
- I will not cheat.
- I will not steal.
- I will report the student who does.
At the end of any graded assignment Episcopal High School students are required to write the following:
- I hereby certify upon my honor that I have neither given nor received any unauthorized assistance on this examination, nor am I aware of any breach of the honor code.
The Honor Committee — comprised of seven student-elected students and four appointed faculty members — promotes understanding of the code and manages individual violations. Violations of the first three points are serious disciplinary matters that usually result in expulsion; the fourth is enforced less strictly, though it is technically of equal importance to the others.
[edit] Notable alumni
- Newton D. Baker- Secretary of War (1916-1921)
- Quentin Roosevelt- youngest Son of Theodore Roosevelt
- Ernest M. Stires- Episcopalian Bishop of Long Island
- Stephen Ailes- Secretary of the Army (1964-1965)
- Louis Bacon - hedge fund manager
- Senator John McCain (1954), Republican senator from Arizona and presidential candidate [2] [3]
- Gaston Caperton, ex-governor of West Virginia and in 2003 president of the College Board[2]
- T. Berry Brazelton, pediatrician and creator of the Brazelton Neonatal Behavioral Assessment Scale
- Julian Robertson, financier
- Virginius Dabney, editor of the Richmond Times-Dispatch (1936-1969) and winner of the 1948 Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Writing
- Paul DePodesta, former GM, Los Angeles Dodgers
- Bryson Spinner, NFL, QB, San Francisco 49ers
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- Episcopal High School's official website
- Profile from BoardingSchoolReview.com
- 1938 TIME Magazine Article on Episcopal's Centennial
Interstate Athletic Conference |
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Members
The Bullis School • Episcopal High School (Alexandria, Virginia) • Georgetown Preparatory School • Landon School • St. Albans School (Washington, D.C.) • St. Stephen's and St. Agnes School |