Mary Institute and St. Louis Country Day School
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Mary Institute and St. Louis Country Day School | |
Address | |
---|---|
101 North Warson Road Ladue, MO, 63124 USA |
|
Information | |
Founder | William Greenleaf Eliot |
Head of school | Lisa Lyle |
Enrollment |
approx. 1200 (total), 582 (9-12) |
Faculty | 171 |
Type | Private |
Grades | JK - 12 |
Campus | Suburban, 100 acres |
Mascot | Ram |
Color(s) | Cardinal Red, Forest Green |
Established | 1859-Mary Institute 1917-St. Louis Country Day School 1993-MICDS |
Homepage | http://www.micds.org |
Mary Institute and St. Louis Country Day School or "MICDS" is a secular, co-educational, private school for about 1,200 students in grades JK-12 which are separated into three different sections, JK-4th grade (lower school), 5th-8th grade (middle school), and 9th-12th grade (upper school). Its 100 acres (404700 m²) campus[1][2] is located in the St. Louis suburb of Ladue. The school has strong academic tradition, and sends the vast majority of its graduates to prestigious four-year colleges.[citation needed]
Contents |
[edit] History
William Greenleaf Eliot, founder and chancellor of Washington University, established MICDS' predecessor institutions in the 1850s as part of the university. A boys' school, Smith Academy, was founded in 1854, and was later attended by the future poet T. S. Eliot. A sister school, Mary Institute, was founded in 1859 and was named for Eliot's deceased daughter.
Smith Academy closed in June 1917; most of its students transferred to a successor school, independent of a university, which opened that September in northwestern St. Louis County. Called St. Louis Country Day School, or CODASCO for short (a nickname still used by the boys' athletic teams, much to the chagrin of school administrations), it was set up along the lines prescribed by the Country Day School movement. CODASCO's campus was in a bucolic environment reached by rail that seemed far from the urban grit of the old Smith Academy.
Mary Institute moved to its Ladue campus in 1931 and became independent of Washington University a few years later. By the 1950s, the tranquility of the Country Day campus was disrupted by the growth of the adjacent Lambert-Saint Louis International Airport. Codasco built a new campus next to Mary Institute, sold its old land to the airport and moved to Ladue in 1958.[3] Eliot's grandson, Nobel laureate T. S. Eliot, who attended Mary Institute's kindergarten and Smith Academy, spoke at the school's centennial in 1959.
Although various connections, including theatrical cooperation, had existed between Mary Institute and Codasco for years, academic coordination between Mary Institute and Country Day began during the 1980s and culminated in the 1992 merger of the schools, when the two schools merged. Codasco headmaster John Johnson, who coordinated the merger, became head of the combined schools, reprising the role of William Greenleaf Eliot almost a century and a half earlier.
[edit] Athletics
MICDS is known for both its rigorous athletics and also its oldest traditions. Students are required to complete two sports credits per year. The school has claimed 23 state championships and 41 district championships in the past decade.[4]
MICDS has a standing athletic rivalry with nearby John Burroughs School, dating back to Country Day School tradition, as well a cross-state rivalry with The Pembroke Hill School in Kansas City. Each year before the weekend when all of the teams play Burroughs, there is a traditional bonfire and pep rally to inspire team spirit.
[edit] Buildings
[edit] North (former Country Day) Campus
Alumni Dining Hall: Renovate and expand in 2005; LitePro projector, drop down screen, public address system with CD, DVD and cassette sources; Seating capacity 350; Outdoor patio with gas grill outdoor seating
Bryant Arts Center: A newly renovated basement with art classrooms and a computer lab. Home to two Theatres, Vincent Price Theatre, a black box theatre, and Orthwein Theatre, two music classrooms and rehearsal rooms. Messing Gallery, a gallery with professional and student artwork, is also located here.
Danforth Hall: Danforth Chapel, Science class rooms and laboratories
Mathews Hall: Math classes and Publications room.
May Hall: The main buildings, housing the administrations' offices of the Upper School and Foreign Language Classes. Upper May, the only building on the North Campus to have classes on the 2nd floor, also includes Science classes and Lower May (basement) has study areas, the security squadron headquarters, one classroom, and a greenhouse.
McDonnell Gymnasium: One regulation basketball court, Mary Institute/ Country Day Athletic Hall of Fame, locker rooms, Athletic offices, film and equipment rooms, weight room, and the Beaumont Natatorium which is a 25 yard competition pool with eight racing lanes capable of hosting short course events as well as water polo matches; Seating capacity: 350 with room for additional 150 on deck; Depth: 3.5 feet at shallow and 5-10 feet at starting end of pool; Water Temperature: 79.6-80.2 degrees Fahrenheit; One underwater window for coaching analysis; Volume: approximately 219,000 gal; KDI Paragon starting platforms; Red and green Competitor 4" racing lane lines; Red and green Kiefer nylon backstroke flags; Colorado Timing Systems electronic touchpads, 8-line LED scoreboard and System 6 Sports Timer.
Olson Hall: Completed for the 1999-2000 school year, this building is situated in the approximate center of the Campus, connecting the two former campuses. It houses all English and History classes on the second floor, as well as the bookstore and school-wide administrative offices on the first floor including Admissions, Business, and Head of School.
[edit] South (former Mary Institute) Campus
McDonnell Athletic Center: 3 Basketball Courts, an 1/8 mile indoor track, and a Fitness Center (Built for the 2000-01 school year)
Freeman Arts Building: One theatre, drama rooms, and multiple art studios.
Schoenberg Hall: Located at between Middle School and Lower School. Includes Beasley and fifth and sixth grade classrooms and lockers. Location of the Lower School Library.
Mary Eliot Chapel: Chapel for Middle School, full theatre with drama and musical rooms backstage.
Danforth Hall (Middle School): Main building of Mary Institute, now used for a majority of the Middle School Classes and Middle School offices and 8th and 7th grade lockers.
Ronald S. Beasley School: Home for Junior Kindergarten through fourth grades.
[edit] Tuition
For the 2006-2007 school year, tuition and fees range from $14,840 for students up to fourth grade to $17,985 and for high schoolers. About 20 percent of students received financial aid.[5]
[edit] Notable alumni
In the 1980s, three St. Louis Country Day School alumni served concurrently in the United States Senate from 1976 until 1987: John Danforth, (R-Missouri); Thomas Eagleton, (D-Missouri); and Pete Wilson, (R-California). Danforth and Eagleton had both previously served as Missouri's attorney general. Wilson left the US Senate to become governor of California.
Other notable alumni include:
- Betty Grable (attended, did not graduate), actress and WWII pin-up girl
- Dorothy Walker Bush, mother of president George H. Bush and grandmother to George W. Bush
- Morton May, Chairman, May Department Stores
- William H. Danforth, MD, Chancellor, Washington University in Saint Louis
- John Danforth, U.S. Senator
- Thomas Eagleton, U.S. Senator
- Pete Wilson, Governor of California, U.S. Senator
- Samuel Pearson Goddard, Jr., Governor of Arizona
- John McDonnell, Chairman, McDonnell-Douglas Corporation
- Vincent Price, actor
- William DeWitt, Jr., Owner, St. Louis Cardinals
- Fred Hanser, Owner, St. Louis Cardinals
- Sterling K. Brown, actor
- Joe Buck, sports broadcaster
- William McChesney Martin, Jr., Federal Reserve Bank chairman
- Robby McGehee, 1999 Indianapolis 500 Rookie of the Year
- Shepherd Mead, author, "How To Succeed in Business Without Really Trying"
- Peter P. Morrin, Director, The Speed Art Museum, Louisville, Kentucky
- Harry Quigley, M.D., Director, Johns Hopkins Wilmer Eye Institute and the Dana Center for Preventive Ophthalmology
- Lawrence K. Roos, Supervisor, St. Louis County, MO, President, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, Interim Chancellor, St. Louis Community College
- Charles Sommer, Chairman, Monsanto
- George Herbert Walker
- Betty Green Sims ’53, Missouri State Senator
- Toya, Pop Singer
- Linda Wells, Editor, Allure Magazine
- Thomas H. Wyman, Chairman & CEO, CBS; Chairman, Green Giant Co.; Vice Chair, Pillsbury Company.
- Sara Teasdale, Poet
- Elizabeth Kendall, Author, "American Daughter, Discovering My Mother"
- Graham Bensinger, Sports Broadcaster
- Jim Lee, Comic Book Artist
- Tom Ackerman Sports Broadcaster
- T. S. Eliot, poet, when Smith Academy
- Orrin W. Robinson, politician, when Smith Academy
- Henry F. Niedringhaus, politician, when Smith Academy
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- Mary Institute and St. Louis Country Day School is at coordinates Coordinates: