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Roxbury Latin

Roxbury Latin School
Roxbury Latin School coa.png
Address
101 Saint Theresa Avenue
West Roxbury, MA 02132
USA
Coordinates 42°16′32″N 71°9′27″W / 42.27556°N 71.15750°W / 42.27556; -71.15750Coordinates: 42°16′32″N 71°9′27″W / 42.27556°N 71.15750°W / 42.27556; -71.15750
Information
Type Private, Day, College-prep
Motto Mortui Vivos Docent
(The dead teach the living)
Established 1645
Headmaster Kerry P. Brennan
Faculty 47
Grades 712
Gender Boys
Enrollment 300
Average class size 13
Student to teacher ratio 7:1
Campus Urban, 120 acres
Color(s) Jewel red, Sable black, white
Athletics 10 sports
32 teams
Athletics conference ISL
Mascot Fox
Rivals Noble and Greenough School
Belmont Hill School
Average SAT scores (2017) 1410
Average ACT scores N/A
Tuition $31,850
Website

The Roxbury Latin School, which was founded in Roxbury, Massachusetts, by the Rev. John Eliot under a charter received from King Charles I of England, is the oldest school in continuous existence in North America, as the loyalist administration did not suspend school activities for the duration of the American Revolutionary War like nearby public Boston Latin School (founded in 1630). Since its founding in 1645, it has educated boys on a continuous basis.

Located since 1927 at 101 St. Theresa Avenue in the West Roxbury neighborhood of Boston, the school now serves roughly 300 boys in grades seven through twelve. Eliot founded the school "to fit [students] for public service both in church and in commonwealth in succeeding ages," and the school still considers instilling a desire to perform public service among its principal missions.

The school's endowment is estimated at $135 million, the largest of any boys' day school in the United States. The school maintains a need-blind admissions policy, admitting boys without consideration of the ability of their families to pay the full tuition.

Its previous headmaster, F. Washington Jarvis, who retired in the summer of 2004 after a 30-year tenure, published two books about Roxbury Latin: a history of the school and a collection of his speeches to boys at Roxbury Latin (With Love and Prayers). The title of the former, Schola Illustris, was the phrase Cotton Mather used to describe the school in 1690, following John Eliot's death. In addition to those books, Richard Walden Hale published Tercentenary History of the Roxbury Latin School in 1946.

Roxbury Latin is a member of the Independent School League and NEPSAC. It has an unofficial sister school relationship with the Winsor School in Boston as well as an African brother school, the Maru a Pula School.


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