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Western High School (Baltimore)

Western High School
Western High School (Baltimore, Maryland) (school seal).png
Address
4600 Falls Road at West Cold Spring Lane
Baltimore, Maryland 21209
United States
Coordinates 39°20′54″N 76°38′37″W / 39.34823°N 76.64354°W / 39.34823; -76.64354Coordinates: 39°20′54″N 76°38′37″W / 39.34823°N 76.64354°W / 39.34823; -76.64354
Information
School type Public secondary magnet school
Motto "Lucem Accepimus, Lucem Demus" (Latin)
("We have received light; let us give forth light")
Founded November 1, 1844 (1844-11-01)
Sister school Baltimore Poly
School district Baltimore City Public Schools
Superintendent Gregory Thornton
School number 407
Principal Michelle White
Grades 912
Gender Girls
Enrollment 1089 (2014)
Area Urban
Color(s) Red and black
Slogan "Western, Only the Best!"
Song "Dear Western"
Athletics conference MPSSAA Baltimore City League
Mascot "Dove"
Team name "Doves"
Website

Western High School is the oldest public all-girls high school remaining in the United States. It is the third-oldest public high school in the state of Maryland and part of the Baltimore City Public Schools. Western High was named a "National Blue Ribbon School" of Excellence by the U.S. Department of Education in 2009 and a "Silver Medal High School" by the news magazine U.S. News and World Report in 2012.

The Western Female High School was founded in 1844 as one of two "twin sisters" secondary schools for young ladies in the then 15-year-old Baltimore City Public Schools system, along with the Eastern Female High School. Earlier in 1829, the first four "grammar" schools (today's elementary schools) were established by the newly organized B.C.P.S., two for boys and two for girls, one in each of the four quadrants of the smaller densely populated city that was Baltimore then. On November 1, 1844, the Western High School officially opened its doors for the first time in the old Armitage Hall located at 100 North Paca Street on the western side of downtown Baltimore, between West Fayette and Lexington Streets. In those two small rented rooms, Robert Kerr, the first principal and sole teacher, welcomed thirty-six young women. Thus began the unique legacy of Western, a pioneer in women's education, along with its companion Eastern High, in the United States. Before the two female high schools were established (as described in the literature of the day, two separate institutions were established in order not to pose an unusual hardship on the young ladies traveling distances through the town), there had been no opportunity for Baltimore girls to get an education beyond the grammar school level.


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