Spence School
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The Spence School is an American all-girls private school in New York City, founded in 1892 by Clara B. Spence.<ref>Survivor: The Manhattan Kindergarten by Kay S. Hymowitz, City Journal Spring 2001</ref>
Spence has about 740 students, with grades K-4 representing the Lower School, 5-8 representing the Middle School, and 9-12 representing the Upper School. Lower school average class sizes are 16-18 and middle and upper school average class sizes are 13–14. The student: teacher ratio is 7:1 and students of color in all grades make up approximately 33 percent of the student body.<ref>The Spence School | FAQ</ref>
For the 2017–18 academic year, tuition and fees total $49,980 for all grades.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Its sister schools are the all-girls Brearley School, the all-girls Chapin School and the all-boys Collegiate School, all in New York City. Forbes magazine ranked Spence ninth on its "America's Best Prep Schools" list in 2010.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
HistoryEdit
The Spence School was founded in 1892 by Clara B. Spence, who was its head for 31 years. The school's motto is {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (Latin for 'Not for school, but for life we learn'). The first building was located on New York City's West 48th Street.<ref>The Spence School | History</ref> The school once had a boarding option, but all current girls are day students.
Clara B. Spence described her school as: "A place not of mechanical instruction, but a school of character where the common requisites for all have been human feeling, a sense of humor and the spirit of intellectual and moral adventure."
Spence read from Shakespeare in dramatic declamation every week. She was known for her conservative comportment and strictness, but also her devotion to women's rights. She arranged for Edith Wharton, Helen Keller, and George Washington Carver to speak at the school. Isadora Duncan taught dance classes.<ref name=":0" />
In a commencement address from an unknown year, Spence said that cultivating imagination was an important skill, since “sympathy, that great bond between human beings, is largely dependent on imagination—that is, upon the power of realizing the feelings and the circumstances of others so as to enable us to feel with and for them.”<ref name=":0">Template:Cite book</ref>
The school has been located on East 91st Street since 1929.<ref>Template:Citation</ref> In 1999, the school purchased the William Goadby Loew House at 53 E 93rd Street for use as it's Lower School building. In 2008, Spence acquired the adjoining Wanamaker-Munn townhouse on 90th street for use as it's Upper School facilities.<ref>Template:Citation</ref>
AcademicsEdit
Spence offers a liberal arts and science curriculum, including programs in the arts and foreign languages. In a Worth magazine study, out of the 31,700 private and public high schools in the United States, Spence ranked the sixth most successful school in the country in placing its graduates in Harvard, Yale and Princeton.<ref>CollegePrepUSA (from Worth magazine) Template:Webarchive</ref>
Notable alumnaeEdit
- Serena Altschul, broadcast journalist
- Madeleine Astor, Titanic survivor
- Maiken Baird, film producer
- Frances Baldwin, artist<ref name=SF1>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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- Edith Bouvier Beale, socialite
- Georgina Bloomberg, equestrienne, daughter of Michael Bloomberg
- Doris Caesar, sculptor
- Eleanor A. Campbell, physician and founder of Judson Health Center
- Huguette M. Clark, artist and philanthropist<ref>Bill Dedman, Paul Clark Newell, Jr., Empty Mansions: The Mysterious Life of Huguette Clark and the Loss of one of the World's Greatest Fortunes, London: Atlantic Books, 2013, pp. 105-108</ref>
- Melissa Doi, businesswoman and victim of 9/11 terrorist attacks
- Lady Malcolm Douglas-Hamilton, philanthropist and anti-communist
- Elisabeth C. Draper, interior decorator
- Ruth Wales du Pont, socialite, philanthropist, and composer
- Dawn French, comedian<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- Helen Clay Frick, philanthropist and art collector
- Caroline Gorman, singer
- Francine du Plessix Gray, author and literary critic
- Patricia Wright Gwyn, politician and librarian
- Angelia Lawrance Morrison Harris, First Lady of North Carolina
- Janet Hobhouse, novelist and biographer
- Nancy Hopkins, molecular biologist
- Jade Jagger, jewelry designer
- Bonnie Jenkins, public servant<ref>Bonnie Jenkins U.S. State Department bio (though no mention of Spence)</ref>
- Jill Kargman, actress, writer
- Jane Kim, politician
- Greta Kline, singer
- Margaret Carnegie Miller, philanthropist
- Alley Mills, actress
- Elizabeth Montgomery, actress<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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- Sara Wiborg Murphy, socialite
- Dorothy Klenke Nash, neurosurgeon
- Gwyneth Paltrow, actress
- Mary Ellis Peltz, music critic and poet
- Karen Polle, equestrian
- Marjorie Merriweather Post, philanthropist
- Sally Pressman, actress
- Louise Goff Reece, politician
- Evette Rios, lifestyle expert
- Emmanuelle Grey "Emmy" Rossum, actress
- Heidi Vanderbilt, actress, photographer, and writer
- Natalie Mai Vitetti, socialite
- Kerry Washington, actress
- Electra Havemeyer Webb, arts patron
- Caroline Beaumont Zachry, psychologist
Affiliated organizationsEdit
- National Coalition of Girls' Schools
- New York State Association of Independent Schools
- New York Interschool
See alsoEdit
ReferencesEdit
External linksEdit
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