St. Paul's School for Boys (Maryland)
St. Paul's School for Boys is an Episcopal, coed, private school located in Brooklandville, Maryland. It occupies a 120-acre (0.49 km2) rural campus in the Green Spring Valley Historic District, ten miles (16 km) north of the city of Baltimore in suburban Baltimore County.
St. Paul's School for Boys | |
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Address | |
11152 Falls Rd , , United States | |
Information | |
Type | Private, Day |
Motto | "Veritas et Virtus" (Truth and Virtue) |
Religious affiliation(s) | Episcopal[1] |
Established | February 1849 |
Sister school | St. Paul's School for Girls (reestablished 1959) St. Paul's Pre and Lower School (coed, six week through grade 4) |
NCES School ID | 00579506[1] |
Headmaster | Edward M. Trusty, Jr.[2] |
Faculty | 108.6 (FTE)[1] |
Grades | 5–12 |
Gender | Coed |
Enrollment | 565 (2020)[1] |
Student to teacher ratio | 7:1[1] |
Campus | Large suburban, (since 1952) 64 acres (260,000 m2) |
Color(s) | Blue and Gold |
Athletics conference | Maryland Interscholastic Athletic Association (MIAA) |
Mascot | "The Crusader" |
Teams | "The Crusaders" (athletic) |
Rival | Boys' Latin School of Maryland |
Newspaper | The Monitor |
Website | www |
The school includes a pre-school and a lower school, which are coed through grade 4. The boys school also shares its campus with St. Paul's School for Girls which was reestablished in 1959 after a 19th-century predecessor failed. In July 2018, the schools unified under the umbrella of The St. Paul's Schools, with a single board of trustees and one president; each school retains its individual traditions and its gender-specific programs.
St. Paul's School for Boys was founded in February 1849 at Old St. Paul's Parish in Baltimore City by the Reverend William Edward Wyatt, rector.
St. Paul's moved its campus four times until its final location at the current grounds in 1952. The principal building on the Brooklandville campus is "Brooklandwood," a mansion built in 1793 by Charles Carroll of Carrollton (1737-1832), one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1972.[3]
Academics
At the time of the school's founding in the mid-nineteenth century, boys studied Greek, Latin, and math. Church music was also given high priority. Today St. Paul's School for Boys offers a college-preparatory curriculum for students in the Upper School (grades 9–12). The school offers the IB Diploma Program. It also offers courses in theater, concert chorale, digital arts, and visual arts.
Athletics
St. Paul's places a strong emphasis on athletics. Despite the school's small class sizes of roughly 70 students per class year, the school supports varsity teams in lacrosse, football, soccer, volleyball, cross-country, wrestling, basketball, ice hockey, squash, tennis, crew, golf, baseball.
Lacrosse
Since the start of varsity lacrosse interscholastic competition at St. Paul's in 1933, the Crusaders have won 25 titles in the old Maryland Scholastic Association (MSA) followed by the Maryland Interscholastic Athletic Association (MIAA) — more than any other team in the conference. St. Paul's claimed its first lacrosse title in the MSA public/private schools league in 1940 under Lacrosse Hall of Fame head coach Howdy Myers. St. Paul's prevailed the next two decades in the MSA, winning the title 14 times.
In 1947, St. Paul's beat Princeton University twice. During this period, St. Paul's posted five undefeated seasons, four under Myers and another in 1951 underJim Adams. The 1969 Crusader team, coached by George Mitchell, went undefeated. The 1992 St. Paul's team also went undefeated, winning a MSA championship under coach Mitch Whiteley. In 2010, St. Paul's won the conference championship, the 25th in school history, under head coach Rick Brocato. St. Paul's has produced 12 C. Markland Kelly Award winners, which honors the top scholastic player in the state of Maryland each year. St. Paul's has also produced 22 high school All-Americans and 21 graduates in the U.S. Lacrosse Hall of Fame.
Basketball
The inaugural season for Varsity Basketball was 1935 and the program has won 16 championships with 13 coaches. Championships include the MSA "B" Conference, Baltimore Interacademic League, (IAC), MSA “C”, MSA “A” Conference, and the MIAA B Conference.The most recent championship was in 2016–17. Coach Howdy Myers’ team won the first championship in 1938–39 in the MSA B conference.
Football
Since varsity football began early at St.Paul's in 1936, the Crusaders have won 20 championships. Mitch Tullai, former varsity football coach, coached at St. Paul's from 1953 to 1993. Over 40 years, Tullai won 11 Championships, including 6 MSA C-Conference Championships, and 5 Tri-County Championships.
Golf
The Varsity Golf team at St. Paul's School currently holds 16 MIAA or MSA championship titles, 8 stroke-play championship titles, 8 individual champions, and 11 All Metro Players. The team's home course is the West Course at Baltimore Country Club. The head coach is Eric Nordstrom with the head emeritus being Rick Collins.[4]
Traditions
Since 1935, the St. Paul's Honor Council has been run by a group of upperclassmen who are elected by the student body. The council upholds the school's honor code and the principles of the school motto, Veritas et Virtus, truth and virtue. The first alumni association was founded in 1894. Each year, the alumni association plays host to a number of events that bring alums back to campus.
Notable alumni
- James 'Ace' Adams '46, lacrosse Hall of Fame inductee and coach; namesake includes Adams Field at UPenn[5][6]
- Scott Bacigalupo, lacrosse player
- A. Aubrey Bodine, photographer
- Conor Gill (born 1980), professional lacrosse player
- Spencer Horwitz (born 1997), Major League Baseball first baseman for the Toronto Blue Jays
- Steve Johnson (born 1987), professional baseball pitcher for the Seattle Mariners[7]
- Johnny Mann, Grammy Award-winning composer, conductor, entertainer, and recording artist
- Brooks T. Moore '81, narrator for How It's Made
- Mark Pellington, director of Arlington Road and music video for the Pearl Jam song "Jeremy"
- Richard Sher, newscaster, WJZ-TV Baltimore
- LaMonte Wade (born 1994), baseball player for the San Francisco Giants[8]
- Mark Walsh, entrepreneur, venture capitalist, political activist
- Michael Watson (born 1974), professional lacrosse player
- Glenn Yarbrough, '48, folk singer, lead singer of the Limeliters from 1959 to 1963
- Don Zimmerman, college lacrosse coach
References
- "Search for Private Schools – School Detail for St. Paul's School". National Center for Education Statistics. Institute of Education Sciences. Retrieved October 23, 2020.
- "Head of School". www.stpaulsmd.org. The St. Paul's Schools. Retrieved February 8, 2021.
- "National Register Information System – St. Paul's School for Boys (#72000567)". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. April 15, 2008.
- Coffin, Nelson (June 28, 2021). "10 Years of Excellence: VSN's Private Schools Golf Coach of the Decade". Varsity Sports Network. Retrieved April 25, 2022.
- "It Takes a Team: Adams Field Named in Honor of Former Penn Lacrosse Coach | Penn : Making History". Archived from the original on June 9, 2010. Retrieved March 27, 2010.
- "James Adams". USA Lacrosse. Retrieved April 25, 2022.
- "Pitcher Steve Johnson, lost in Rule 5 draft, is back". Retrieved June 1, 2018.
- "In passing on Stefon Diggs and LaMonte Wade, Ravens and Orioles missed out on Terps talent". Baltimore Sun. Retrieved August 16, 2016.
Further reading
- Hein, David. "The Founding of the Boys' School of St. Paul's Parish, Baltimore." Maryland Historical Magazine 81 (1986): 149–59.
- Hein, David. "Christianity and Honor." The Living Church, August 18, 2013, pp. 8–10.
- Otterbein, Angelo F. We Have Kept the Faith : The First 150 Years of the Boys' School of St. Paul's Parish, 1849-1999. Brooklandville, Md.: St. Paul's School, 1999.