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The Governor's Academy (informally known as Governor's or Gov's) is a co-educational, college-preparatory day and boarding school in Byfield, Massachusetts. Established in 1763 in memory of Massachusetts governor William Dummer, Governor's is the oldest boarding school in New England.
The Governor's Academy | |
---|---|
Address | |
1 Elm Street , 01922 | |
Coordinates | 42°45′00″N 70°53′54″W / 42.75000°N 70.89833°W |
Information | |
Former name | Governor Dummer Academy |
Type | Private, boarding |
Motto | Non sibi sed aliis (Not for self, but for others) |
Established | 1763 |
Headmaster | Peter H. Quimby, M.Ed. |
Enrollment | 415 |
Average class size | 12[2] |
Student to teacher ratio | 5:1[1] |
Campus size | 456 acres (1.85 km2) |
Color(s) | Cardinal and white |
Athletics conference | Independent School League |
Mascot | The Governor |
Rival | Brooks School |
Endowment | $170 million |
Tuition | Boarding: $72,900, Day: $58,025 in 2022–2024 |
Website | thegovernorsacademy.org |
Governor's educates approximately 400 students in grades 9–12, roughly 60% of whom live on campus. Its campus covers 456 acres (1.85 km2) and is 33 miles (53 km) north of Boston.
History
editFoundation
editIn 1763, the Dummer Charity School was founded in memory of William Dummer (d. 1761), who served as the acting governor of Massachusetts from 1723 to 1728.[3] A widower with no children,[3][4] Dummer bequeathed his family farm in Byfield, Massachusetts to Charles Chauncy, Thomas Foxcroft, and Nathaniel Dummer with instructions to establish a "Free Grammar School."[5] The school opened in March 1763 with 28 boys and Samuel Moody as the first preceptor (headmaster).[6] Byfield residents attended the school for free until 1837.[7]
Governor's is the oldest boarding school in New England and the third-oldest boarding school in the United States, after Maryland's West Nottingham Academy and Pennsylvania's Linden Hall.[8] At times, the academy has billed itself as the oldest continuously operating boarding school in the United States.[9][10] However, it temporarily shut down several times, including in 1790 and 1819.[11]
A new trend in secondary education
editDummer School was founded to prepare students for college. Although William Dummer was not a college graduate, his brother Jeremiah attended Harvard and provided important early support to Yale.[12] William foresaw a need for college-preparatory schools in outlying areas, particularly in Essex County; most prep schools at the time were concentrated near Boston. Under Moody, two-thirds of Dummer students commuted to campus from nearby communities.[13]
However, the more historically notable aspect of Dummer School was its boarding program. For the first 15 years of Dummer School's existence, it was the only boarding school in Massachusetts.[13] It was "the first school of its kind in America" to operate on-campus residential facilities for boarders,[14] who comprised the remaining one-third of the student body and lived in Governor Dummer's old mansion.[13] (Today, "Mansion House" serves as the headmaster's residence and plays a regular role in student life.)
The curriculum focused on instruction in Latin, Greek, and the classics, with supplemental teaching in sacred studies, basic math, and English. Universities considered classical studies integral preparation for college until the turn of the twentieth century.[15] From 1768 to 1790 (when Moody retired), the Dummer School educated 128 (25.5%) of Harvard's 501 graduates.[16]
The Dummer School lost its monopoly on both Essex County and Massachusetts in 1778, when Dummer alumnus Samuel Phillips founded Phillips Academy in Andover. The Phillips Academy historian wrote that Phillips wanted to found a more distinctly sectarian (Calvinist) institution, in contrast to Dummer, where religion was not "a central part" of student life.[17]
In October 1782, the school received a corporate charter, which renamed the institution to Dummer Academy.[5] (The academy formally adopted the name Governor Dummer Academy in 1950.[18]) During the early republican era, the term "academy" typically signaled an institution's intention to broaden the academic curriculum beyond Latin and Greek.[14] However, Dummer Academy did not formally establish a non-classical course of study until 1837, and the director of the "English Department" resigned in 1842.[19]
Development
editTo help raise money, an alumni association was established in 1822.[20] Henry Durant (p. 1849–52) ran the school for two (according to the school historian, unsuccessful) years, after which he moved to California and founded the University of California.[21]
By the time of the school's centennial in 1863, the Dummer Academy had grown into a well known 19th-century prep school that catered mostly to children from affluent families who aspired to the Ivy League. By the turn of the 20th century, however, the school had fallen on hard times, with enrollment and income down, as the school struggled under the shadow of Andover and Exeter, and other schools that had grown to become very well known and prestigious.
In 1908, Dr. Charles Ingham became headmaster and launched great efforts to revive the academy. As a result, Dummer Academy became stabilized and began to again thrive as a premier New England prep school that sent over a third of its graduates to Ivy League colleges during that period. Upon Dr. Ingham's retirement in 1930, Edward "Ted" Eames became headmaster, a post he held for 30 years.
With limited exceptions, the school educated only boys until 1972.
In December 2005, the board of trustees voted to change the business name of the academy to The Governor's Academy (its legal name remains Governor Dummer Academy). A marketing company had found that the name "Dummer" was deterring prospective students from applying.[22] According to the Washington Post, the school's name was frequently "fodder for all manner of insulting puns."[23] Some students and alumni resisted the change, questioning why the academy should let "shallow" teenage jokes supersede tradition.[22][24]
From 2017 to 2024, Governor's has been conducting a large-scale fundraising campaign, which seeks to raise $100 million, including $23 million to support financial aid.[25]
Notable alumni
editThis article's list of alumni may not follow Wikipedia's verifiability policy. (November 2015) |
- Wentworth Cheswell (1765), the first African American elected to public office in the United States
- Theophilus Parsons (1765), Chief Justice of Massachusetts
- Eliphalet Pearson (1769), first headmaster of Phillips Academy Andover, interim President of Harvard University, 1804-1806
- Samuel Phillips, Jr. (1771), founder of Phillips Andover
- Samuel Tenney, scholar, judge, physician/surgeon who treated wounded at the Battle of Bunker Hill, attached to the 1st Rhode Island Regiment, encamped at Valley Forge, PA, designated acting Surgeon General of the Army by General Washington, delegate to New Hampshire's Constitutional Convention, U.S. congressman
- Samuel Sewall (congressman) (1772), U.S. congressman, Chief Justice of Massachusetts
- Rufus King (1773) delegate to Constitutional Convention, United States Senator and 1816 Federalist candidate for President
- Samuel Osgood (1776), first U.S. Postmaster, Speaker New York State Assembly; first President, City Bank of New York
- Edward Preble (1776), U.S. Naval officer during Revolutionary War and thereafter, commanded USS Constitution during war with Barbary Pirates
- Tobias Lear (1779), personal secretary to George Washington
- Benjamin Pickman, Jr. (1780), Massachusetts state legislator, U.S. congressman
- Sir David Ochterlony, American "Tory" officer in the British Army who served in India from 1777 until his death in 1825, rising to the rank of general while helping to consolidate British colonial rule there
- Joseph Willard, President of Harvard University (1781–1804)
- Samuel Webber, President of Harvard University (1806–1810)
- Parker Cleaveland (1795), professor of mineralogy at Bowdoin College, leading early American authority on this subject, known as the "Father of American Mineralogy"
- Frederick W. Lander, Brig. Gen. USA, killed in action during the Civil War
- Reuben D. Mussey, Jr. (1846), Brig. Gen. USA, later private secretary to President Andrew Johnson, professor at Howard University Law School; he married Ellen Spencer Mussey, who became one of the first female attorneys in the District of Columbia and who was leading suffragist. She also became a founder of the Washington College of Law.
- John W. Candler, member of Congress from Massachusetts during the 1880s
- Benjamin Perley Poore, journalist, newspaper editor and founder of the Gridiron Club
- Yu Kil-chun, Korean reformist and the first Korean to study in the West, entered the school in 1884[26]
- Frank Crowe (1901), civil engineer and dam builder (Hoover Dam, Shasta Dam)[27]
- William Summer Johnson (1932), professor of chemistry at Stanford who was awarded the National Medal of Science
- Benjamin A. Smith II (1935), U.S. senator from Massachusetts, 1960–62
- Joe Hoague (1937), professional football player, Pittsburgh Steelers
- Ted Bergmann, American TV and film producer and screenwriter
- Niles Perkins (1938), athlete and physician
- Dodge Morgan (1950), the first American to sail solo around the globe with no stops (1986)
- Michael Stonebraker (1961) Receiver of the ACM Turing Award also referred to as the "Nobel Prize of Computing"
- Jeb Bradley (1970), U.S. congressman, 2003–2007; New Hampshire state senator 2009-
- Steve Bucknall (1985), professional basketball player, LA Lakers
- Carrie Walton Penner (1988), Walton Family, Charter School Growth Fund[28]
- Dan Gadzuric (1998), professional basketball player, Golden State Warriors
- Nat Baldwin (1999), bassist and singer, member of Dirty Projectors
- Song, Chang-il (2000), known by his stage name Double K, a South Korean rapper
- Derek Falvey (2001), Executive Vice President and Chief Baseball Officer for the Minnesota Twins of Major League Baseball (MLB)
- Didit Hediprasetyo (2001), fashion designer
- Benn Ferriero (2004), former professional ice hockey player for the San Jose Sharks
- Robert Francois (2004), professional football player, Minnesota Vikings, Detroit Lions, Green Bay Packers, Super Bowl champion 2010-11
- Alex Carpenter (2011), Olympic women's ice hockey player
- Duncan Robinson (2012), professional basketball player, Miami Heat
- Jake Picking (2010), American actor
- Matt Peart (2015), professional football player for the New York Giants of the NFL
References
edit- ^ "GOV View Book". Archived from the original on 2014-12-28. Retrieved 2014-12-28.
- ^ "The Governor's Academy: At a Glance". Archived from the original on 2014-12-28. Retrieved 2014-12-28.
- ^ a b Phillips, James Duncan (1947). "Harvard College and Governor Dummer's School". Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society. 69: 196. ISSN 0076-4981. JSTOR 25080410.
- ^ Kimball, Hoke P.; Henson, Bruce (2017-03-29). Governor's Houses and State Houses of British Colonial America, 1607-1783: An Historical, Architectural and Archaeological Survey. McFarland (published 2017). p. 115. ISBN 978-1-4766-2593-5.
- ^ a b Acts and resolves passed by the General Court. Commonwealth of Massachusetts. 1782–83. pp. 49–53.
- ^ Phillips, p. 198.
- ^ Cleaveland, Nehemiah (1865). The First Century of Dummer Academy. Nichols & Noyes. pp. 51, 53–54.
- ^ Fabrikant, Geraldine (2008-01-26). "At Elite Prep Schools, College-Size Endowments". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2024-04-24.
- ^ "School Profile 2013-2014" (PDF). The Governor's Academy. Retrieved 2024-04-24.
- ^ "History". The Governor's Academy. Archived from the original on 2011-09-26. Retrieved 2024-04-24.
- ^ Cleaveland, pp. 35-36, 43-44.
- ^ Phillips, pp. 195-96.
- ^ a b c Cleaveland, p. 21.
- ^ a b Frank, Douglas Alan (1992). The History of Lawrence Academy at Groton: 1792 to 1992. Groton, MA: Lawrence Academy. p. 4.
- ^ Hyland, Richard (1986). "A Defense of Legal Writing". University of Pennsylvania Law Review. 134 (3): 622. doi:10.2307/3312113. ISSN 0041-9907. JSTOR 3312113.
- ^ Phillips, pp. 199-201.
- ^ Allis, Jr., Frederick S. (1979). Youth from Every Quarter: A Bicentennial History of Phillips Academy, Andover. Hanover, NH: University Press of New England. p. 42.
- ^ Acts and resolves passed by the General Court. Commonwealth of Massachusetts. 1950. pp. 160–61.
- ^ Cleaveland, pp. 51-53.
- ^ Cleaveland, pp. 46-47.
- ^ Cleaveland, pp. 54-55.
- ^ a b Kunzelman, Michael (2005-12-04). "Name change on the way for Governor Dummer Academy". Portsmouth Herald. Retrieved 2024-04-24.
- ^ Finer, Jonathan (2005-02-26). "Mass. Private School To Drop Dummer Name". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2024-04-24.
- ^ "Boarding school name change sparks outcry". Lewiston Sun Journal. 2005-02-19. Retrieved 2024-04-24.
- ^ "The Governor's Academy Surpasses $100 Million Fundraising Goal". www.thegovernorsacademy.org. 2024-03-01. Retrieved 2024-04-24.
- ^ Governor's boasts strong ties to Korea, http://www.thegovernorsacademy.org/page.cfm?p=357&newsid=43
- ^ "F.T. Crowe Dead, Built 19 U.S. Dams", New York Times, February 28, 1946
- ^ "This Quiet Walton Heir Is An Uber Education Policy Wonk - Inside Philanthropy: Fundraising Intelligence - Inside Philanthropy". insidephilanthropy.com. 14 February 2014. Retrieved 28 June 2015.
Further reading
edit- Massachusetts Board of Education; George A. Walton (1877), "Report on Academies: Dummer Academy", Annual Report...1875-76, Boston – via Internet Archive
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: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
External links
edit- Media related to The Governor's Academy at Wikimedia Commons
- Official website
- The Governor's Academy on Twitter
- The Governor's Academy on Instagram. Archived from the original on ghostarchive.org