Moses Brown School | |||||||||||||||||
Address: | 250 Lloyd Avenue | ||||||||||||||||
Country: | United States | ||||||||||||||||
Type: | Private | ||||||||||||||||
Religion: | Quaker | ||||||||||||||||
Motto: | Verum Honorem ("For the Honor of Truth") | ||||||||||||||||
Head: | Katie Titus | ||||||||||||||||
Faculty: | 216 | ||||||||||||||||
Ratio: | 8:1 | ||||||||||||||||
Athletics: | 30 sports | ||||||||||||||||
Mascot: | Quaker | ||||||||||||||||
Head Name: | Head of school | ||||||||||||||||
Campus: | Urban, 33acres | ||||||||||||||||
Enrollment: | 771 total | ||||||||||||||||
Class: | 13 students | ||||||||||||||||
Colors: | White and Navy Blue | ||||||||||||||||
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Moses Brown School is an independent, Quaker, college preparatory school located in Providence, Rhode Island, offering pre-kindergarten through secondary school classes. It was founded in 1784 by Moses Brown, a Quaker abolitionist, and is one of the oldest preparatory schools in the country.[1] The school motto is Verum Honorem, "True Honor", and the school song is "In the Shadow of the Elms", a reference to the large grove of elm bushes that still surrounds the school.[2]
Moses Brown (1738–1836) was the school's founder and a member of the Brown family, a powerful mercantile family of New England. He was a pioneering advocate for the abolition of slavery, a co-founder of Brown University, and an industrialist.
In 1777, a committee of New England Yearly Meeting took up the idea for a school to educate young Quakers in New England.The school opened in 1784 at Portsmouth Friends Meeting House in Portsmouth, Rhode Island. However, there was a shortage of both students and teachers in the years following the American Revolutionary War, and the Yearly Meeting decided to close the school four years later.
Brown worked to restart the school as treasurer of the school fund, and he was able to convince the Yearly Meeting to reopen it by donating the land in Providence for the school to be built on. It reopened in 1819 in Providence. Moses Brown joined with his son Obadiah and his son-in-law William Almy to pay for the construction of the first building, which still serves as the main building of the school. Obadiah Brown also left $100,000 (equivalent to $ million in) in his will to the school, a sum unheard of at the time for a school endowment. In 1904, the school was renamed "Moses Brown School" to honor its benefactor and advocate. It offered an "upper" and "lower" school for younger boys.[3]
The Quakers were early advocates of women's education, and Moses Brown School was co-educational. However, in 1926 it became a boys-only boarding school as was the fashion for college-prep schools in America at the time. It again became coed in 1976. Well-known faculty over the years included the twin Quaker educators Alfred and Albert Smiley in the mid-Nineteenth Century[4] and children's author Scott Corbett in the 1960s. It transitioned to a private day school in the 1980s.
Ninth and tenth grade students are offered limited flexibility in their courses, aiming to expose them to a varied selection of topics. English is the only subject mandated through four years in the Upper School. Students must study a single language for three years, and lab sciences for two. There is a requirement for a comparative religions class. Students are also required to take a minimum of two semesters of fine art courses. Students are required to participate in varied school activities, whether athletic, theater, dance, or community service.
In the 1960's, Moses Brown's Field House was the testing ground for AstroTurf.[5] The school briefly made headlines during the January 2015 nor'easter when Headmaster Matt Glendinning released a music video called "School Is Closed", in which he parodied "Let It Go" from Frozen.[6] The school is mentioned in H. P. Lovecraft's novella The Case of Charles Dexter Ward as the alma mater of the titular villain.[7]
Moses Brown School is located on 33acres on Providence's East Side.