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| Staten Island Academy | |
|---|---|
| Location | |
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715 Todt Hill Road , United States | |
| Information | |
| Type | Private,college prep |
| Motto | Libertas, Integritas, Decora |
| Established | 1884 (1884) |
| Founder | Anton Methfessel |
| Head of school | Eileen F. Corigliano |
| Grades | Pre-K – 12 |
| Gender | Co-ed |
| Enrollment | ~390 |
| Colors | Maroon & gold |
| Mascot | Tiger |
| Website | Staten Island Academy |
Staten Island Academy is acoeducational, college-preparatory day school located on a 14-acre (57,000 m2) campus inStaten Island,New York City, United States. Founded in 1884 by Anton Methfessel, it is the oldest independent school on Staten Island, and is the onlyindependent school (non-public, non-religious) in theborough. It educates students frompre-kindergarten throughgrade 12. The current enrollment is around 390 students, with a student to teacher ratio of 7:1. Eileen Corigliano is the current head of school. The school is composed of three divisions: Lower School, Pre-K-Gr. 4; Middle School, Gr. 5-8; Upper School, Gr. 9-12. The campus has seven buildings: the Early Childhood Building, the Art Barn, Haugen Hall, Kearns Hall, Crowe Hall, Alumni Hall and the OJ Buck Gymnasium. The school's accreditations include theMiddle States Association of Colleges and Schools, and theNew York State Association of Independent Schools. It is chartered and registered by the Board of Regents,University of the State of New York.
The Academy was formally chartered on September 5, 1884 by Anton Methfessel and prominent educators that helped merge the Methfessel Institute, which was founded in 1862, with the original Staten Island Academy and Latin School.[1] It rapidly expanded, dropped the phrase “Latin School” from its name, and gained prominence with a curriculum that was progressive for its day. In 1885, required courses for the Intermediate Form (grades 9-12) included Latin, German, French, English, geography, physiology, zoology, mathematics, history, natural philosophy, expression, music, and drawing. The Academic Form required more advanced study, and The Latin School division mandated, additionally, student literacy in both Latin and Greek.
Many prominent professionals in theater, education, literature, politics and business were associated with the Academy throughout this period including actor Sidney Wollett,North Pole explorerAdmiral Perry,Booker T. Washington, theVanderbilt family,Jacob Riis, andGeorge William Curtis, a member of the Academy's Board of Trustees and the namesake for Curtis High School.
In 1891 the school bought land at the corner of Wall Street and Academy Place, a street that was named after the school, in the St. George section of Staten Island. Because of the expanding student population, a grand new building of English architectural design was built, and the cornerstone was laid in December 1895. The new building was dedicated at commencement in June 1896.[2][3] The historic cornerstone now stands outside Alumni Hall on the school's Todt Hill campus, while the original building is now the Staten Island Museum.
The fall of 2002 marked a new chapter in the Academy's history with the installation of Diane J. Hulse as the 15th Head of School.[4] During the summer of 2003, the Stanley Library was completely renovated, the Patrick Commons dining hall was upgraded, new playground equipment was installed, and outdoor benches and tables were added. A school fitness center was opened in late 2003. In the summer of 2004, the school's athletics fields were upgraded. The Alexander Robbins Steinman Foundation partially funded the project in honor of Alex Steinman, Class of 1986, who died on9/11. Other projects included the restoration of the Art Barn and the Haugen Hall entry steps, upgrades to classrooms, the art room, and computer labs.
In Spring 2018, the Renaissance Campaign was announced, which is a five-year development to drastically reshape the Academy. Over $6.02 million has currently been funded, with a stated goal of $10 million.[5] Some of the funds will be used for financial aid for “qualified students”. As part of the campaign, Crowe Hall will be completely renovated and expanded, notably the addition of classrooms on the second floor and an overall area expansion of the first floor.[6] Construction was hoped to begin in early 2019.
The Academy's mascot is thetiger, and its colors aremaroon andgold. Athletic offerings includeCross Country,Baseball,Soccer,Tennis,Golf,Softball,Basketball,Volleyball andLacrosse.
The Girl's Varsity Tennis team went undefeated in both theCatholic High School Athletic Association (CHSAA) and PSAA tennis leagues, winning the season and playoff championships.[7]
The Girl's Varsity Basketball team championed the Lady Tigers Holiday Tournament and the Fieldston Tip-Off Tournament.
The Girl's Varsity Lacrosse team championed the AAIS league.[8] The team also participated in the NYSAIS tournament.
The Boy's Varsity Volleyball team championed the PSAA regular season and playoffs.[9]
The Girl's Varsity Basketball team championed the Lady Tigers Holiday Tournament and the Fieldston Tip-Off Tournament.[10]
The Girl's Varsity Softball team were the PSAA regular season champions.[11] The team additionally were the NYS Federation "B" champions.[12]
The Academy publicizes a "representative" list of "distinguished graduates".[13] Among the alumni who achieved wider notability:
40°35′41″N74°06′33″W / 40.59472°N 74.10917°W /40.59472; -74.10917