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Westtown School

Private school in West Chester, Pennsylvania, United States


Summary

Private school in West Chester, Pennsylvania, United States

FieldValue
nameWesttown School
imageWesttownSchool.jpg
image_size200px
established
typePrivate, day, boarding, college preparatory school
religionQuaker
head_nameHead of school
headChris Benbow
address975 Westtown Rd
cityWest Chester
statePennsylvania 19382
countryUSA
campus_typeSuburban
campus_size600 acres
enrollment694
genderCo-educational
gradesK–12
faculty107
class10 students
athletics24 Varsity Teams
athletics conferenceFriends School League
Pennsylvania Independent School Athletic Association (PAISAA)
colorsBrown, White, Blue
mascotWesttown Moose
nicknameMoose
tuition$25,000–$72,990
homepage
yearbookAmicus
rivalGeorge School, Shipley School
publicationWestonian
newspaperBrown and White(Digital)

Pennsylvania Independent School Athletic Association (PAISAA)

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.

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. 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.

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.

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.

Student Life

Westtown School boasts a wide variety of clubs and organizations, both faculty and student run. Many of these clubs are geared towards creating change, such as SASH (Students Advocating for Student Health), JSU (Jewish Student Union), BSU (Black Student Union), ISO (International Student Organization), Green Coalition, Politics Club, Hearts for Hearts (H4H), and Rainbow Alliance along with numerous other clubs with a more recreational or hobby like focus. Some notable popular clubs include flag football, chess, ski, Dungeons and Dragons, E-Sports, and Model UN.

Students also partake in weekend trips to nearby places like Philadelphia, King of Prussia Mall, and West Chester.

Sports

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.

The Westtown Wrestling team, led by legendary coaches Jay Farrow '75 and Timothy Loose, has amassed 26 League Titles. The Wrestling team has the most FSL titles for any sport and team in the entire league's history. Jay Farrow coached the wrestling team for 44 years. Jay amassed 498 dual meet victories as a coach while also coaching 162 PAISWT Placewinners, including multiple National Prep All-Americans. He won PAISWT Head Coach of the Year and National Preps Head Coach of the Year in 2024, his final season of coaching.

In 2023, the Westtown boys varsity soccer team won the FSL without conceding a single goal. Additionally, girls' varsity won every game they played, and both boys and girls JV won their leagues respectively, making it the most successful year for a Friends League school's soccer program in the history of the competition.

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.

Additionally, the campus has several dozen acres of farmland, and hosts "Farmer Jawn's", a local produce store. Students can participate in farming as a co-curricular. "Farmer Jawn's" also supports a number of food cupboards in the Philadelphia area.

Notable alumni

· Only people who already have a Wikipedia article may appear here. This establishes notability. · The article must mention how they are associated with Westtown. · The fact of their association should have a reliable source cited. · Alphabetical by last name, please. · All others will be deleted.

  • Samuel Leeds Allen (1841–1918), inventor of Planter Jr seeders, farm tools and agricultural implements as well as the Flexible Flyer, the world's first steerable runner sled
  • Donald Baechler (1956–2022), Class of 1973, painter and sculptor
  • Mo Bamba, Class of 2017, professional basketball player for Utah Jazz
  • Anna Cox Brinton (1887–1969), classics scholar, Quaker worker overseas, administrator at Pendle Hill
  • John Cassin, ornithologist (1813–1869)
  • Marysol Castro (1976–), news anchor for WPIX and Public address announcer for the New York Mets
  • Laetitia Moon Conard (1871–1946), college instructor and politician in Iowa
  • Gilbert Cope (1840–1928), genealogist and historian of Chester County, Pennsylvania
  • Steve Curwood, Class of 1965, is host of NPR's Living on Earth environmental news series
  • Susan Eisenhower, Class of 1970, consultant, author, and expert on international security
  • Anna Fang, Class of 2000, Chinese venture capitalist, CEO of ZhenFund
  • Jim Fowler (1930–2019), Class of 1947, Conservationist and wildlife correspondent/show host - Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom
  • Benjamin Hallowell, president of Maryland Agricultural College
  • Isaac Israel Hayes (1822–1881), Arctic explorer, physician and politician
  • Arthur W. Hummel, Jr. Class of 1938, American diplomat; U.S. ambassador to China, 1981–1985
  • Crete Hutchinson (1884–1970), writer
  • Richard T. James (1914–1974), with his wife, invented the Slinky
  • Dereck Lively II, Class of 2022, professional basketball player for Dallas Mavericks
  • Rachel Lloyd (1839–1900), chemist
  • Rebecca Lukens (1794–1854) Considered first woman industrialist in the United States.
  • Samuel George Morton, physician, natural scientist and writer
  • Herb Pennock, Class of 1915, Major League Baseball player and manager, baseball Hall of Fame
  • Cam Reddish, Class of 2018, basketball player for the BC Šiauliai
  • Kevin Roose, Class of 2005, writer and technology columnist for the New York Times
  • Holland Taylor (1943–), Class of 1960, Emmy Award-winning actress
  • Garrick Utley, Class of 1957, a correspondent for CNN's New York bureau
  • Anthony H. Williams, Class of 1975, Pennsylvania State Senator, 8th District

References

References

  1. "Tuition, Aid, and Scholarships".
  2. "Clubs and Affinity Groups".
  3. "Westtown School: Our Mission, Values, & Philosophy".
  4. "Westtown School: Private co-ed Quaker Day & Boarding School".
  5. "History - Westtown School".
  6. (2015). "Holy Nation: The Transatlantic Quaker Ministry in an Age of Revolution". University of Chicago Press.
  7. (7 August 2015). "Clubs and Affinity Groups".
  8. (7 August 2015). "Clubs and Affinity Groups".
  9. "Weekends at Westtown".
  10. "WeTown".
  11. Haughton, Dania. "Meet the starting five featured in SI TV's 'We Town'".
  12. (11 August 2015). "FSL Varsity Wrestling".
  13. "Forbes "Jay Farrow"".
  14. "PAISWT 2024".
  15. (9 May 2024). "Vista Today "Jay Farrow"".
  16. (11 August 2015). "Varsity Soccer Team Champions".
  17. (7 August 2015). "Girls Soccer Team Champions".
  18. (11 August 2015). "Varsity Soccer Team Champions".
  19. "Westtown School: Our 600 Acres".
  20. "Farmer Jawn's".
  21. (5 December 2016). "Pa. basketball preview, big men: Westtown's Bamba is among nation's best". The Philadelphia Inquirer.
  22. (August 2018). "Oliver Spotlight: Marysol Castro '92".
  23. (October 10, 2010). "Fang-Hamm".
  24. (1926). "Who's who in the Nation's Capital". Consolidated Publishing Company.
  25. (1917). "The Friend: A Religious and Literary Journal". The Friend..
  26. "Duke center Dereck Lively II goes to Dallas Mavericks with the No. 12 pick in the 2023 NBA Draft".
  27. Moten, Crystal. (August 6, 2021). "How Rebecca Lukens Became the Nation's First Woman Industrialist".
  28. "Cam Reddish". [[Basketball-Reference.com]].
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