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Saint Mary's School (Raleigh, North Carolina)

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Religious affiliation(s)
  
Episcopal

Grades
  
9–12

Phone
  
+1 919-424-4000

Founded
  
1842

Faculty
  
40

Gender
  
Girls

Number of students
  
275

Saint Mary's School (Raleigh, North Carolina)

Type
  
Private, Day & Boarding, College-prep

Campus
  
Urban, 23 acres (93,000 m)

Address
  
900 Hillsborough St, Raleigh, NC 27603, USA

Color
  
Columbia/Carolina Blue and White

Profiles

Saint Mary's School is a private independent Episcopal college-preparatory, boarding and day school for girls in grades 9-12. Located in Raleigh, North Carolina, Saint Mary's School is operated as an independent school, and has an historic association with the Episcopal Church and has an Episcopal chapel, St. Mary's Chapel, on the school's grounds. The school formerly operated as Saint Mary's College and educated young women in grades 11-12 and their freshman and sophomore years in college. The school changed to a four year high school in 1998, at which point the name reverted to Saint Mary's School, the original name of the institution when it was founded in 1842.

Contents

School information

The school has 40 faculty members, with 83% holding advanced degrees. Enrollment for the 2015-2016 school year is 264 full-time students, representing 11 states and seven countries. The average class size is 13 students.

Among the superlatives assigned to the school include the oldest continuously operated school in Raleigh, North Carolina, the third oldest girls' school in the state, and the fourth oldest girls' boarding/day school in the United States.

History

Founded in 1842 by the Rev. Aldert Smedes, an Episcopal priest, Saint Mary's School has operated continuously on the same site ever since.

With the support of the Episcopal Diocese of North Carolina, Smedes founded Saint Mary's as a school for young ladies "designed to furnish a thorough and excellent education equal to the best that can be obtained in the city of New York, or in any Northern school." The school was founded on the site of the Episcopal School of North Carolina, a short-lived school for boys in the 1830s. Three of the present school buildings - East Rock, West Rock and Smedes Hall - formed the original campus. East Rock and West Rock, the first two buildings, were constructed with remnant stones from the construction of the North Carolina state capitol.

History tells us that 13 girls, "The Original 13," arrived on the first day, May 12, 1842. A total of 21 students enrolled for the first session.

During the Civil War, Saint Mary's became a safe haven for relatives of both Union and Confederate generals, including Robert E. Lee's daughter and the family of Jefferson Davis. Smedes kept the school operating throughout the war. In 1865, General Tecumseh Sherman's Union troops camped in The Grove on front campus, and Sherman visited Smedes in the main building. From 1906-1908 President Woodrow Wilson's daughter Jessie Wilson attended Saint Mary's.

Today, Saint Mary's School is an independent, Episcopal, college-preparatory, boarding and day school dedicated to academic excellence and personal achievement for girls in grades 9-12. Saint Mary's School remains true to Aldert Smedes' time-honored mission of providing an excellent education for young women.

The historic core of the school's 23-acre campus is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is a stop on the North Carolina Civil War Trails. The Saint Mary's Chapel, designed by Richard Upjohn, is a National Historic Site, and five of the school's 25 buildings are Raleigh Historic Properties.

Campus

Saint Mary's buildings date from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries and also include antebellum structures individually recognized as Local Historic Landmarks. Three buildings from the 1830s are visible from Hillsborough Street from behind a wooded glade of large oaks, hollies, and magnolias.

The school's oldest structures, East and West Rock, are matching buildings of discarded stone from the building of the second North Carolina State Capitol in the 1830s. The brick Greek Revival building between them was erected soon after; it was remodeled in 1909 to include a Neoclassical Revival front portico and dormitory wings. This main building was named Smedes Hall for the school's founder, the Rev. Aldert Smedes.

Two buildings erected in the later nineteenth century are Gothic in style: the 1855 Richard Upjohn Gothic Chapel and the 1887 Gothic Revival arts building, a brick structure with pointed-arch windows.

The early twentieth century saw much construction; nearly all the permanent brick buildings, which were rendered in the Colonial Revival style, survive. Later construction continued to complement earlier buildings, and the view of the campus from Hillsborough Street remains notable for its historic integrity.

Saint Mary's School was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978 as a national historic district. The district encompasses nine contributing buildings, including St. Mary's Chapel. Currently, the campus is considered to be part of downtown Raleigh.

Athletics

Saint Mary's School offers a full interscholastic athletic program consisting of 18 sports teams. Saint Mary's School competes as a member of the Triangle Independent Schools Athletic Conference (TISAC) and the North Carolina Independent Schools Athletic Association (NCISAA, 3A Classification). The following sports offered at Saint Mary's are:

  • Soccer
  • Cross Country
  • Field Hockey
  • Golf
  • Tennis
  • Volleyball
  • Basketball
  • Lacrosse
  • Swimming
  • Track and Field
  • Softball
  • References

    Saint Mary's School (Raleigh, North Carolina) Wikipedia