The Barstow School
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The Barstow School | |
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Address | |
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11511 State Line Road , United States | |
Coordinates | 38°55′06″N 94°36′17″W / 38.9182°N 94.6048°W |
Information | |
Type | Independent |
Motto | "To promote sound scholarship, and to give symmetrical development to mind, body and character." |
Established | 1884 (girls only), 1967 (Coed Educational) |
CEEB code | 261-605 |
Head of School | Shane A. Foster |
Faculty | 110 total |
Enrollment | Approx. 750 |
Student to teacher ratio | 9.5:1 |
Campus | Suburban |
Campus size | 40 Acres |
Color(s) | Green, black, white |
Song | Standards High |
Athletics | 19 interscholastic, numerous club |
Athletics conference | Crossroads Conference (XRC) |
Mascot | Knight |
Tuition | $17,165 - $25,530 |
Website | barstowschool |
The Barstow School, formerly called Miss Barstow’s School,[1] is a secular, coeducational, independent preparatory school in Kansas City, Missouri, USA. It was co-founded in 1884[2] by Mary Louise Barstow and Ada Brann.
The Barstow School enrolls 750 students from preschool through grade 12.
History
Mary Louise Barstow and Ada Brann, both graduates of Wellesley College, came to Kansas City in 1884, responding to the need to establish a local school comparable to the outstanding independent schools on the East Coast. With the support of several notable families in the rapidly growing city, they founded the Barstow School at 12th Street and Broadway on Quality Hill in Downtown Kansas City.
As both the school and the city grew and prospered, the school moved several times: first to near Grace and Holy Trinity Cathedral on Quality Hill, then to 40th Street and Westport Avenue, then to 4950 Cherry Street in the Brookside neighborhood, and finally in 1962 to 115th Street and State Line Road, a location then on the far outskirts of the city but today well within Kansas City's suburban sprawl. Although originally coeducational, in 1924 Barstow became an all-girls school except at the preschool level. The school resumed coeducation when it moved to its current location.
In 1960, boys were admitted to the first grade, and Barstow became coeducational one grade and one year at a time, until its first coed graduating class in 1972. Although its class sizes often were under ten, Barstow had two famous alumnae during its early days: movie star Jean Harlow and First Lady Bess Truman.
In 2003, Barstow built a new lower school.
Athletics
This section needs additional citations for verification. (November 2018) |
The
Notable alumni
- Eldar Djangirov, jazz pianist
- Josh Earnest, White House Press Secretary for the Obama Administration, 2014
- Jacob Gilyard, basketball player for the Richmond Spiders
- Jean Harlow, film actress and top sex symbol of the 1930s, known as the Platinum Blonde[3]
- Jessica Krug, American historian, author, and activist[4]
- Brian Loftin, former Major League Soccer Player for the Tampa Bay Mutiny and former commissioner of the Xtreme Soccer League.[5]
- Quinton Lucas, University of Kansas law professor who was elected Mayor of Kansas City in 2019.[6]
- Michael MacCambridge, author, journalist, TV commentator, and editorial coordinator of the Chiefs’ Hall of Honor.[7]
- Jamie Metzl, politician and national security expert
- Margot Peet, artist
- Marc Solomon, gay rights activist, national director of Freedom to Marry, and author[8]
- Bess Truman, wife of Harry S Truman and First Lady of the United States from 1945 to 1953.[9]
- Nick Wright, sports personality
References
- ^ Kansas City Public Library https://kchistory.org/image/miss-barstows-school?solr_nav%5Bid%5D=96035f7edba38613215b&solr_nav%5Bpage%5D=2&solr_nav%5Boffset%5D=11.
{{cite web}}
: Missing or empty|title=
(help) - ^ "The Barstow School at a Glance". Retrieved July 9, 2018.
- ^ Jean Harlow Biographical Info, accessed November 20, 2006
- ^ Nozicka, Luke. "Professor from Kansas City who posed as Black resigns from George Washington University." Kansas City Star, The (MO), September 9, 2020. NewsBank: Access World News. https://infoweb-newsbank-com.dartmouth.idm.oclc.org/apps/news/document-view?p=AWNB&docref=news/17D67E5633A924B8.
- ^ "KC's finest." Kansas City Star, The (MO), April 14, 2004: D6. NewsBank: Access World News. https://infoweb-newsbank-com.dartmouth.idm.oclc.org/apps/news/document-view?p=AWNB&docref=news/101FA1B49615CA77.
- ^ "Alumni in Residence The Barstow School". www.barstowschool.org. Retrieved 2019-02-07.
- ^ "Why we love the Chiefs: Famous Kansas Citians share their passion". Kansas City Star. Retrieved January 28, 2020.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ "Interview with Marc Solomon '85". Barstow School. 2015-01-26. Retrieved 2016-05-30.
- ^ Bess Truman from Encyclopædia Britannica, accessed November 20, 2006
External links
- The Barstow School
- Profile from the school's website
- Barstow School at the National Center for Education Statistics
- Blog post from John Chubb, President of NAIS, after his December '14 visit to the school at the National Association of Independent Schools
- 2018-2019 Academic Profile