| The Webb Schools | |
|---|---|
| Location | |
![]() | |
| Coordinates | 34°7′31″N117°44′22″W / 34.12528°N 117.73944°W /34.12528; -117.73944 |
| Information | |
| Type | Private |
| Motto | WSC:Principes non Homines("Leaders, not Ordinary Humans") VWS:Sapientia Amicitia Atque Honor("Wisdom, Friendship, and Honor") |
| Established | WSC: 1922 VWS: 1981 |
| Dean | Sarah Lantz |
| Head of school | Dr. Theresa Smith |
| Faculty | 57 |
| Grades | 9–12 |
| Enrollment | 400 (2025–2026) |
| Average class size | 16 |
| Campus size | 150 acres (61 ha) |
| Colors | Blue and gold |
| Athletics | 44 teams in 15 sports |
| Athletics conference | San Joaquin League of theCalifornia Interscholastic Federation |
| Mascot | Gauls |
| Accreditations | Western Association of Schools and Colleges |
| Website | webb |
The Webb Schools (now often simply "Webb") is a private school for grades 9–12 located inClaremont, California. Up until 2024, it was separated into TheWebb School of California for boys (established in 1922) and theVivian Webb School for girls (established 1981).[1] It is primarily aboarding school, but also enrolls a limited number ofday students.[2]
The school has a campus of approximately 150 acres (610,000 m2) in the foothills of theSan Gabriel Mountains. There are 402 students and 57 faculty members, of which the school reports that 25% hold doctorates, 90% hold advanced degrees, and 74% live on campus (as of the 2018–2019 school year).[3] Annual tuition (as of the 2025–2026 school year) is $84,070 for boarding students and $59,790 for day students, including meals, books, and fees. Webb offers over $7 million in need-based aid to 32 percent of the families averaging $60,000 for boarding students and $40,000 for day students.[4]
Until 2024, the majority of ninth- and tenth-grade classes were taught in a single-sex environment. Co-educational courses were introduced to upperclassmen.[5] Since 2024, all classes have become co-educational.
The Webb School's founder, Thompson Webb, was born in 1887 as the youngest of eight children. His father,William Robert “Sawney” Webb, had established theWebb School inTennessee in 1870.[6]


The official student newspaper of The Webb Schools is theWebb Canyon Chronicle.[7]

Webb is the only high school in the United States with a nationally accredited museum,[8] and the only high school in the world with a paleontology museum on campus.[9] TheRaymond M. Alf Museum of Paleontology is named for long-time Webb science teacher Raymond M. Alf (1905–1999). In the late 1930s, Alf and several students found afossil skull in theMojave Desert in theBarstow area. This discovery of a newspecies ofMiocene-agepeccary,Dyseohyus fricki,[9][10] inspired additional fossil-hunting trips in the western United States with student groups.
Alf continued his pursuit of paleontology by earning his master's degree from theUniversity of Colorado. The fossil hunting continued when Alf returned to Webb and he subsequently created a small museum in the basement of Jackson Library to house his collection of thousands of fossils. As the collection eventually outgrew the shelves in Alf's classroom and the library basement, the museum moved to its own campus building in 1968. Today the museum is curated by Mairin Balisi, and is accredited by theAmerican Alliance of Museums.[11] The museum features one of the largest collections offossil animal footprints in the world.[12] The Alf Museum continues to sponsor paleontology field excursions over the summers and has contributed to the discovery of new species likeGryposaurus monumentensis, in theGrand Staircase–Escalante National Monument in southern Utah. The fossils were removed and identified in collaboration with theUniversity of Utah and the national monument.[13]
Fascinated byCalifornia missions, Thompson Webb took the mission atSan Juan Capistrano as the inspiration for the Vivian Webb Chapel, a monument to both his religious faith and his love for his wife. In 1937, with the help of a smallcement mixer and two hired workers, Thompson began making 60-pound (27 kg)adobe bricks. After a year of turning out more than 10,000 mission-style bricks and drying them in the sun on the school's tennis courts, he began building the chapel's foundation in 1938, and laid the chapel's first brick in 1939. He built the walls of the chapel with the help of students, parents, visitors, prospective students and the governor of Tennessee.[14]
Near completion of the structure, Webb learned thatsculptor Alec Miller was in the United States because of World War II and lacked the funds to return to his native Scotland. Miller was well known in England because of his carvings for the cathedral atCoventry.[15]
The parents of Thomas Jackson donated the Thomas Jackson Library to the school as a memorial to their son, who graduated from Webb in 1930 but died of a heart attack while in his sophomore year at theCalifornia Institute of Technology. The library, dedicated in 1938, was designed by acclaimed architectMyron Hunt, who also built theRose Bowl, thePasadena main library, and Thompson and Vivian Webb's campus home. The building, in aMediterranean style with small balconies on the second floor and amezzanine balcony around the interior, won an Honor Award from theAmerican Institute of Architects soon after its dedication.[16]
The original Webb School founded by Thompson Webb's father still operates in Tennessee. A son of Thompson and Vivian Webb, Howell Webb, founded the Foothill Country Day School in Claremont in 1954.[27] A nephew, Robert Webb, started theWebb School of Knoxville in Tennessee in 1955.[28]
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