Harman Patil (Editor)

The Gregory School

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School type
  
Independent

Grades
  
5-12

Mascot
  
Hawks

Established
  
1980

Phone
  
+1 520-327-6395

Founded
  
1980

Head of school
  
Dr. Julie Sherrill (2013-present)

Enrollment
  
190 high school students (October 1, 2012)

Slogan
  
"A Tradition of Inspiring Excellence"

Address
  
3231 N Craycroft Rd, Tucson, AZ 85712, USA

Motto
  
"A Tradition of Inspiring Excellence"

Colors
  
White, Navy blue, Columbia blue

Similar
  
Salpointe Catholic High Sch, University High School, Desert Christian Schools, Sahuaro High School, Catalina Foothills High Sch

Profiles

The Gregory School (formerly known as St. Gregory College Preparatory School) is an independent, private, non-sectarian, coed middle and high school in Tucson, Arizona, United States. The school has no religious affiliation.

Contents

As of 2015, the Gregory School offers grades 5-12 and has under 300 students with an average class size of 14 students per class. The school's 37-acre campus in central Tucson includes a 370-seat theater, science and technology center, basketball and volleyball gymnasium, band room, soccer and baseball/softball fields, a state of the art fabrication lab, student lounges, and a dining hall.

The Gregory School is the only school in Southern Arizona accredited by the Independent Schools Association of the Southwest (ISAS). It is also a member of the National Association of Independent Schools (NAIS).

Happy thanksgiving from the gregory school


History

According to David Leighton, historian for the Arizona Daily Star newspaper, the idea for the Gregory School began with Ruth McCormick "Bazy" Tankersley, an Arabian horse breeder and former publisher of the Washington Times-Herald. In 1978, she decided that Tucson needed another private school and took her first steps in this endeavor by purchasing a book on how to start a school, as well as writing to the National Association of Independent Schools for materials and information.

Her vision was for an Episcopal college-preparatory school in Tucson. She enlisted the help of Rev. Roger Douglas, then rector of the St. Philip's in the Hills Episcopal Church and a small number of interested friends. In time, an independent board of trustees was created to establish the school as a 501 c(3) entity, able to receive tax-deductible donations.

Tankersley was soon joined by Jane Ivancovich as the main benefactors for the new school. Ivancovich, a devout Catholic, was tasked with coming up with the school name. After conferring with her spiritual adviser, she suggested the name St. Gregory I (Gregory the Great), the patron saint of teachers and students, with the board of trustees soon approving the name. Tankersley and Ivancovich, within a year, were joined by Margaret Modine-Gomez as the third benefactor for the school.

The board of trustees then carried out a nationwide search for a headmaster to lead the new school. After a while, they chose Rev. Russell W. "Russ" Ingersoll, who had been rector and headmaster at private boarding schools in Virginia and Wisconsin. In turn, Ingersoll, working out of a rented trailer in the unpaved parking lot of the St. Philips Episcopal Church, carried out a national search for teachers to fill the necessary posts for the school. By January 1980, he had hired the school's first teachers: Christopher Boyle of Delaware for English, Vinton Geistfeld of Minnesota for math, Oscar Morales of Tucson for languages and Howard Zeskind of Washington, D.C., for history.

Meanwhile, a site committee looked for suitable land and, in March 1980, selected a parcel on North Craycroft Road near East River Road. It had been part of the Fort Lowell Military Reserve in the late 1800s. Following this it was included in the William Haynes homestead property. It had several successive owners until Dickson B. Potter purchased the land in 1945.

Potter was a native of New York but had kept a home in the Old Pueblo since the late 1930s. He and his wife, Sue, established the Potter School for Girls across the street from the Arizona Inn on Elm Street, along Potter Place, a small street that ran by the school. His Tucson land became known as the Potter Ranch; a ranch house and stables were constructed for the riding master who lived there and taught English and Western style riding.

St. Gregory Episcopal High School opened on Sept. 5, 1980, with approximately 50 students. Eventually the school ended its affiliation with the St. Philip's in the Hills Episcopal Church and became a non-religious educational institution, known as St. Gregory High School. It recently changed its name to the Gregory School.

Athletics

The Gregory School fields 14 sports.

References

The Gregory School Wikipedia