The Baldwin School

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The Baldwin School
BaldwinFrontGate.jpeg
Address
701 Montgomery Avenue

Bryn Mawr
,
Pennsylvania
19010

United States
Coordinates40°1′23″N 75°18′46″W / 40.02306°N 75.31278°W / 40.02306; -75.31278Coordinates: 40°1′23″N 75°18′46″W / 40.02306°N 75.31278°W / 40.02306; -75.31278
Information
Other names
  • Baldwin School
  • Baldwin
TypePrivate school
MottoLatin: Disce Verum Laborem
Established1888; 133 years ago (1888)
FounderFlorence Baldwin
NCES School ID01197719[1]
Head of schoolMarisa Porges[2]
Teaching staff78.6 (on an FTE basis)[1]
GradesPK–12
GenderGirls
Enrollment571 (2015–2016)[1]
Student to teacher ratio7.0[1]
Campus typeSuburban
Color(s)Blue and gray   
Athletics conferenceInter-Academic League
MascotWinnie the Bear
NicknameBaldwin Bears
Publication
  • Echoes
  • Florilège
  • El Pimiento
  • The Roman Candle
  • The Baldwin Review
[3]
NewspaperThe Hourglass[3]
Websitewww.baldwinschool.org
Bryn Mawr Hotel
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
Pennsylvania state historical marker
Area1.5 acres (0.61 ha)
Built1890
ArchitectFurness, Evans, & Co.; Frank Furness
Architectural styleRenaissance, French Chateau
NRHP reference No.79002300[4]
Significant dates
Added to NRHPApril 27, 1979
Designated PHMCApril 11, 2000[5]

The Baldwin School (simply referred to as Baldwin School or Baldwin) is a private school for girls in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, United States. It was founded in 1888 by Florence Baldwin.

The school occupies a 19th-century resort hotel designed by Victorian architect Frank Furness, a landmark of the Philadelphia Main Line.[6] The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places on April 27, 1979.[4]

Baldwin's brother school is the Haverford School, in nearby Haverford.[7] The two schools are regarded as the premier single-sex schools in the Philadelphia area, and regularly compete with the Brunswick/Greenwich duo in Connecticut. Locally, Baldwin/Haverford compete with many schools, such as Springside/Chestnut Hill and the Episcopal Academy, both in academics and athletics.

History[]

In 1888, Florence Baldwin founded "Miss Baldwin's School for Girls, Preparatory for Bryn Mawr College" in her mother's house at the corner of Montgomery and Morris Avenues in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania.[8] The first class was composed of thirteen girls.[citation needed]

"The Residence" (formerly Bryn Mawr Hotel) by Furness, Evans & Company. The second Bryn Mawr Hotel opened May 30, 1891).

The second Bryn Mawr Hotel was designed by Furness, Evans & Company and built in 1890–91. It is a five-story, "L" shaped stone-and-brick building in a Renaissance Revival / châteauesque style. It features a large semi-circular section at the main entrance, topped by a conical roof and finial. It has a steeply pitched red roof with a variety of dormers, chimneys, towers, finials, and skylights.[9]

In 1896, The Baldwin School began leasing the Bryn Mawr Hotel during the winter months for use as a dormitory for its boarding students. They leased it year-round beginning in 1912. In 1922, the school purchased the building and the surrounding 25 acres (100,000 m2) for $240,000.

Today the school has made many additions to "The Residence", as it is called, but has maintained the elegance of the original building. It is now used for the dining hall, many art studios, a black box, apartments for faculty and staff, music classes, and an Early Childhood Center. It also has many lounge areas for students and others.[10]

A two-story science building opened in 1961; it was enlarged in 1995 to accommodate the increasing number of students. The Upper and Middle Schools inhabit the three-story Schoolhouse, which was built in 1926. It was renovated in 1997. The Middle School on the third floor was renovated again in the summer of 2018.

Grades 1-5 are housed in the Lower School building, which was completed in 1974. Changes have been made, for instance, painting the walls bright colors, to make it a warmer learning environment for the younger girls.

Renovations completed in 2014 to "The Residence" specifically support the Pre-Kindergarten and Kindergarten classes.[10] In 2015, a performing arts center was built called The Simpson Center, which can be used for many different events.[10]

The school formally opened a new athletic center in 2008. It has a six-lane swimming pool, gymnasium, three-lane jogging track, 4 squash courts, fitness center, and multipurpose meeting/activity space. It is accompanied by a five tennis courts and a practice field.[10]

Scholarships[]

$2.8 million in scholarships is distributed annually to 28% of the students. The average grant awarded was $18,261. [11]

Student body[]

Students of color represent 40% of the student body.[11] The Baldwin School is not religiously associated.

Academics[]

Twenty six percent of the Class of 2014 attended Ivy League institutions. Twenty seven percent of the Class of 2015 was recognized by the National Merit Scholarship Program.[12] Thirty two percent of the Class of 2018 went on to attend Ivy League institutions.

Baldwin has a high percentage of graduates majoring and working in math and science fields, about 1/3 greater than the national average for women.[13][14] In 2014, 28% of the graduates pursued a degree in science and engineering.[12]

Arts[]

Music[]

Baldwin's music education begins in the Lower School. Students receive twice weekly music classes and sing in weekly choruses in Grades 3–5. Students perform in musical plays once a year. In Middle School, chorus, orchestra and classes in guitar and hand bell are available. In Upper School, ensembles include a jazz band, classical chamber music ensemble Firenze, two hand bell choirs, chorus, select a cappella vocal ensemble Baldwin B-Flats, select singing ensemble Eliza-B-thans and an orchestra. Each ensemble is featured during multiple evening concerts throughout the year.

The Middle School Chorus participates annually in the Music in the Parks competition at Hershey Park in May. At the 2014 competition, the Middle School Chorus received a Superior rating and the Best Overall Middle School Chorus trophy for their performances. Every three years, the Upper School ensembles take a week and a half performance tour to a destination abroad. Past destinations include Vienna, Austria; Tuscany, Italy; Budapest, Hungary; Stockholm, Sweden; Oslo, Norway; and Copenhagen, Denmark.

The Baldwin Conservatory offers weekly private instruction on piano, voice, violin, viola, flute, clarinet, saxophone, oboe, trumpet, trombone, guitar, ukulele, banjo and harp. The Baldwin Conservatory has had many accomplished musicians as faculty including pianist and composer Jean Paul Kürsteiner.

Theater[]

In the 2013–14 school year:

  • a student won a gold medal at Alliance for Young Artists & Writers's Scholastic Art & Writing Awards for her dramatic script.
  • a student placed 1st in the Monologue Competition at the Zak-Pac Convention for Performing Arts.
  • Middle and Upper School drama students submitted plays to the Philadelphia Young Playwrights Festival and one student received a stage reading of her play as part of Pizza and Playwrights.
  • one student placed 2nd and another placed 3rd in the Philadelphia Young Playwrights’ Annual Play writing Festival.
  • an excerpt from a student's original work was featured in an Off-Broadway Dramatic Reading Series at the ART.WRITE.NOW 2014 National Exhibition in June.
  • a student was one of 30 American and international actors ages 12 to 19 who traveled to the Czech Republic to perform "I Never Saw Another Butterfly" within the walls of Terezin Concentration Camp.

Visual Art

Baldwin offers lessons in hand and wheel ceramics, computer graphics, photography, jewelry making, painting and sculpture. The School's Rembrandt antique-style etching press was restored during the 2013–14 school year and used extensively for Middle School and Upper School Art Exhibition student works. 2013-14 Upper School students had their work displayed in the Tyler School of Art's "Clay Programs of Excellence" and the After-School Enrichment Ceramics classes displayed their work at Bryn Mawr's Ludington Memorial Library.[15]

Athletics[]

The Baldwin School competes in the Inter-Academic League, most commonly known as the Inter-Ac. Interscholastic varsity sports are: Basketball, Cross-Country, Field Hockey, Golf, Lacrosse, Rowing, Soccer, Softball, Squash, Swimming and Diving, Tennis, Volleyball, and Indoor Track. Dance is also offered, and students also have the option of Independent PE if they are seriously committed to a sport outside of school such as horseback riding or ice skating, or any sport included in Baldwins program. Athletes who do participate in IPE are required to play their sport for Baldwin during the season if it is an offered sport. PE is another option, which is during the school day, for either 45 or 70 minutes.

Baldwin is especially strong in tennis, softball, squash, and lacrosse, whose teams regularly travel to the Pittsburgh, New York, and Baltimore areas for heightened competition.[16] The Baldwin Bears have recently been Inter-Ac champions in softball, lacrosse, and squash. Its longtime local rival has been the Episcopal Academy in Newtown.

The Baldwin School's athletic center features an indoor track, swimming pool, multiple locker rooms, team meeting room, fitness center, dance studio, squash courts, and basketball court. The building features solar reflective roofing, regionally sourced materials, Energy Star equipment and appliances, and an indoor air quality management system. [17]

Squash[]

Baldwin is best known for its squash program. Each class regularly consists of a couple nationally ranked squash players, many of whom compete internationally across Europe, Canada, and South America. Several Baldwin Squash alumni have gone to play the sport at various Ivy League schools. Many of these players are also among the strongest academically at Baldwin, earning honors including National Merit and induction into the Cum Laude Society.

Baldwin's longstanding rival in squash has been Greenwich Academy in Connecticut. In 2015, the upper school team defeated Greenwich in the US Squash Championships at Trinity College. The school's middle school team won the national championship against Greenwich in 2016 and 2018. The upper school team again faced Greenwich in the 2018 national championships, but lost 1–6.[18] However, in 2019, Baldwin was able to defeat Greenwich 5–2 in the national championships. This ended a 3-year streak of Greenwich being the reigning national champions.[19]

Notable alumnae[]

  • Bertha Adkins (1924) – Undersecretary of Health, Education, and Welfare, Chairman of the Federal Council on Aging, Organizer of the White House Council on Children and Youth, Maryland Women's Hall of Fame Inductee, Executive Director of the Women's Division of the *Republican National Committee
  • Joelle Attinger (1969) - first female top editor (executive editor) and correspondent for Time magazine, President of the European Institute[20]
  • Ruth Davidon (1982) – rower, 1996 Summer Olympics and 2000 Summer Olympics
  • Louise Dolan (1967) - Mathematical Physicist and Professor of Physics, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Fulbright Scholar, Harvard University Junior Fellow, Guggenheim Fellow, Maria Goeppert-Mayer Award of the American Physical Society
  • Gertrude Sumner Ely (1895) - twice-decorated by the French for distinguished bravery under fire, past president of the Pennsylvania League of Women Voters, member of the executive committee for UNICEF and the World Affairs Councils of America[21]
  • Henrietta H. Fore (1966) – first woman Administrator of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and Director of U.S. Foreign Assistance, 37th Director of the United States Mint in the U.S. Department of Treasury, Presidential Appointee for President George H. W. Bush at the U.S. Agency for International Development
  • Jody Gerson (1979) – Chairman and CEO of Universal Music Publishing Group, co-president of Sony/ATV Music Publishing, responsible for signing Lady Gaga, Alicia Keys and Norah Jones, producer of Drumline and ATL, executive producer of Drumline: A New Beat[22][23]
  • Alice Goffman sociologist
  • Farah J. Griffin (1981) – author, Professor at Columbia University, New York Public Library Cullman Center for Scholars and Writers fellow[24]
  • (2007) - Duke University Division I lacrosse midfielder, 2007 U-19 World Championship Team member, Atlantic Coast Conference Rookie of the Year, WomensLacrosse.com Rookie of the Year, Womenslax.com Rookie of the Year
  • Trish Hall (1968) – The New York Times Op-Ed and Sunday Review editor[25]
  • Susan Bunting Larson (1965) - Vice President of Dell
  • Leslie Lyness (1986) - US women's field hockey midfielder, 1996 Summer Olympics
  • Andrea Lee (1970) - writer and novelist
  • Helen Taft Manning (1908) – daughter of President William Howard Taft, Dean of Bryn Mawr College, Distinguished Daughter of Pennsylvania, suffragette
  • Kate Miller (1978) - Dean of Texas A&M College of Geosciences, Geological Society of America Fellow[26]
  • Emily Hartshorne Mudd (1917) - Distinguished Daughter of Pennsylvania, first woman to become a full professor at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania[27]
  • Martha Nussbaum (1964) – author, first woman Junior Fellow at Harvard University, Ernst Freund Distinguished Service Professor of Law and Ethics at the University of Chicago, Founding and Past President of the Human Development and Capability Association, Past President of American Philosophical Association, Central Division
  • Marisa Porges (1996) - White House Fellow, policy adviser in the United States Department of Defense and United States Department of the Treasury, post-doctoral research fellow at Harvard's Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs[28]
  • Margaret Robinson (1969) - Professor of Molecular Cell Biology at Cambridge Institute for Medical Research at University of Cambridge, Fellow of the Royal Society
  • Cornelia Otis Skinner (1918) – author of Our Hearts Were Young and Gay, film and Broadway actress
  • Asali Solomon - Author and academic
  • Katrina Ely Tiffany (1893) - suffragist in New York City
  • Anne Cabot Wyman (1948-2014) - journalist, first female editorial page editor of The Boston Globe, Pulitzer Prize for Public Service, Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Writing finalist
  • Marjorie Yang (1970) - non-official member of the Executive Council of Hong Kong, chairperson of the Esquel Group, independent non-executive director of HSBC, Swire Pacific and Novartis AG, Fortune Magazine's Top 50 Most Powerful Women in International Business
  • Kinney Zalesne (1983) – General Manager of Corporate Strategy at Microsoft, Counsel to U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno, White House Fellow, Assistant District Attorney for the City of Philadelphia

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c d "Search for Private Schools – School Detail for The Baldwin School". National Center for Education Statistics. Institute of Education Sciences. Retrieved February 17, 2019.
  2. ^ "Head of School". The Baldwin School. Retrieved 17 February 2019.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b "Publications". The Baldwin School. Retrieved 17 February 2019.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  5. ^ "PHMC Historical Markers". Historical Marker Database. Pennsylvania Historical & Museum Commission. Retrieved December 30, 2013.
  6. ^ "Bryn Mawr 100: The Baldwin School". 6 August 2011.
  7. ^ https://www.baldwinschool.org/page.cfm?p=526
  8. ^ "The Baldwin School Archives". Baldwin School. Retrieved 1 September 2015.
  9. ^ "National Historic Landmarks & National Register of Historic Places in Pennsylvania" (Searchable database). CRGIS: Cultural Resources Geographic Information System. Note: This includes Hyman Myers (n.d.). "National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: Bryn Mawr Hotel" (PDF). Retrieved 2012-03-24.
  10. ^ Jump up to: a b c d [1]
  11. ^ Jump up to: a b "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-07-25. Retrieved 2010-11-29.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  12. ^ Jump up to: a b "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-07-09. Retrieved 2014-12-01.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  13. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-07-09. Retrieved 2014-12-01.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  14. ^ https://www.nsf.gov/statistics/seind14/content/chapter-2/at02-16.pdf
  15. ^ http://www.linkedin.com/company/the-baldwin-school/baldwin-arts-317425/product
  16. ^ "Schedule - Baldwin Highlanders (Pittsburgh, PA) Girls Varsity Lacrosse 21-22".
  17. ^ "Athletics - the Baldwin School".
  18. ^ "Greenwich Academy wins another U.S. Team squash title". 5 February 2018.
  19. ^ https://www.baldwinschool.org/page.cfm?p=592&teamID=181&event=3237&show=recap
  20. ^ "CNN/Time Impact".
  21. ^ "A look back at Main Line's standout women".
  22. ^ "Jody Gerson Named Head of Universal Music Publishing Group".
  23. ^ "Jody Gerson".
  24. ^ "Farah Jasmine Griffin | the Department of English and Comparative Literature".
  25. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2014-12-06. Retrieved 2014-12-04.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  26. ^ http://geoweb.tamu.edu/profile/KMiller
  27. ^ [2]
  28. ^ "2014 - 2015 Class of White House Fellows". whitehouse.gov. 23 August 2015 – via National Archives.

External links[]

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