Westtown School

Westtown School is a Quaker, coeducational, college preparatory day and boarding school for students in pre-kindergarten through twelfth grade, located in West Chester, Pennsylvania, United States, 20 miles west of Philadelphia. Founded in 1799 by the Religious Society of Friends.[1]

Westtown School
Address
975 Westtown Rd

,
United States
Information
TypePrivate
Religious affiliation(s)Quaker
EstablishedMay 6, 1799 (1799-05-06)
Head of schoolChris Benbow
Faculty107
Enrollment694
Average class size10 students
Campus size600 acres
Color(s)      Brown, White, Blue
Athletics21 Varsity Teams
NicknameMoose
RivalGeorge School
PublicationWestonian
NewspaperBrown and White
YearbookAmicus
Websitewww.westtown.edu

Westtown is a Quaker school affiliated with the Friends General Conference branch of the Religious Society of Friends. The school requires all students to attend Meeting for Worship together with adults in the community who voluntarily attend (boarding students must attend Westtown Monthly Meeting on Sundays as well). Westtown uses the traditional Quaker practice of coming to unity in making some high-level decisions.

Westtown has been coeducational since its 1799 founding. Westtown students come from 16 states and 13 countries.[2]

History

Westtown School opened on May 6, 1799. Philadelphia Quakers founded the school after raising money to build a boarding school and purchasing land a full day's carriage ride from Philadelphia—where they could provide a "guarded education in a healthy environment" away from the secular influences of the city. For many years, Westtown was nearly self-sufficient, with the campus providing raw materials used in the construction of its buildings and food for the people who lived and worked at the school. Westtown is the oldest continuously operating co-educational boarding school in the United States.[3]

Boys and girls had separate classes until about 1870. Boys learned useful skills such as woodshop, surveying, and bookkeeping, and girls had classes like sewing. However, Westtown eventually recognized that students of both genders should know basic academic subjects such as reading, penmanship, grammar, mathematics, geography, and science.

The 1880s brought physical changes to Westtown. The main building was replaced with a structure designed by architect Addison Hutton, completed in 1888, and still in use today. During the 20th century, the student body and curriculum became more diverse. For example, the school added visual and performing arts, and non-Quakers, African-American, and international students were eventually admitted.

Westtown's Esther Duke Archives is a facility dedicated to collecting and maintaining materials relating to the people and history of the school.[4]

The 2018 documentary, We Town, is about the 2016-2017 Upper School Basketball Team, featuring Mo Bamba and Cam Reddish. It chronicles the quest of the team to win the State Championship.[5][6]

Campus

Westtown is located on a campus in southern Pennsylvania. The campus is 600 acres, including a 14.5-acre lake, arboretum, frog pond, 14 playing fields, stadium tennis courts, organic farm, Lower School mini-farm, medicine wheel garden, wooded cross country course, and 21-element ropes course.[7]

Notable alumni

References

  1. "Westtown School: Our Mission, Values, & Philosophy". www.westtown.edu. Retrieved 2020-02-04.
  2. "Westtown School: Private co-ed Quaker Day & Boarding School". www.westtown.edu. Retrieved 2020-02-04.
  3. "History - Westtown School".
  4. Crabtree, Sarah (2015). Holy Nation: The Transatlantic Quaker Ministry in an Age of Revolution. ISBN 9780226255767. Retrieved 20 January 2022.
  5. WeTown, retrieved 2020-02-04
  6. Haughton, Dania. "Meet the starting five featured in SI TV's 'We Town'". Sports Illustrated. Retrieved 2020-02-04.
  7. "Westtown School: Our 600 Acres". www.westtown.edu. Retrieved 2020-02-04.
  8. Carter, Aaron (5 December 2016). "Pa. basketball preview, big men: Westtown's Bamba is among nation's best". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved 12 February 2023.
  9. "Fang-Hamm". Concord Monitor. October 10, 2010. Retrieved April 17, 2022.
  10. "Duke center Dereck Lively II goes to Dallas Mavericks with the No. 12 pick in the 2023 NBA Draft".
  11. Moten, Crystal (August 6, 2021). "How Rebecca Lukens Became the Nation's First Woman Industrialist". Smithsonian Magazine. Archived from the original on October 10, 2021.

39.9494°N 75.5379°W / 39.9494; -75.5379

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