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Western Reserve Academy

Western Reserve Academy
Western Reserve Academy Logo.svg
Location
Hudson, Ohio
USA
Information
Type Private Boarding and Day
Motto Lux et Veritas
Light and Truth
Established 1826
Head of School Christopher Burner
Faculty approx. 69
Enrollment approx. 370
Average class size 12
Student to teacher ratio 6:1
Color(s) Hunter Green and White
Athletics 23 interscholastic
Team name Pioneer
Endowment $113 million
Website
Western Reserve Academy
Western Reserve Academy is located in Ohio
Western Reserve Academy
Western Reserve Academy is located in the US
Western Reserve Academy
Location Roughly bounded by Aurora St. and both sides of Oviatt, High, Hudson, Ohio
Area 58 acres (23 ha)
Architectural style Greek Revival, Federal
NRHP Reference # 75001539
Added to NRHP June 30, 1975

wra.net

Western Reserve Academy (WRA or simply Reserve) is a private, mid-sized, coeducational boarding and day college preparatory school located in Hudson, Ohio. A boarding school, Western Reserve Academy is largely a residential campus, with 280 of 400 students living on campus and the remainder attending the day program as day students. In that population, students matriculated from 21 states and 15 countries. 87% of the faculty hold advanced degrees. Approximately 90% of the faculty members reside on campus in either faculty homes or dormitory apartments. Reserve also participates in an annual exchange program with the Caterham School in Surrey, England.

Western Reserve Academy was established on February 7, 1826 as the Western Reserve College and Preparatory School in Hudson, Ohio, on a 190-acre (768,930 m²) plot of land set aside via charter by the Ohio legislature. The institution’s name comes from the area in which it was built, the Connecticut Western Reserve, as it was the first of its kind in Northern Ohio. The settlers from Connecticut wanted to build a school of the same caliber as Yale University and the same design, with brick buildings and the same motto, Lux Et Veritas. People called it “the Yale of the West.” The first class of the school included eleven students at the college level and eight at the preparatory level. In 1882, the college section moved north to Cleveland, Ohio, and became Western Reserve University, later merging with the Case Institute of Technology to become Case Western Reserve University. Reserve is the 27th oldest preparatory boarding school in the United States, and the oldest outside of the Northeast.

Western Reserve Academy remained open for another twenty-one years, until 1903, when it was forced to close due to financial problems. In 1916, however, the school reopened due to the graces of benefactor James Ellsworth, a former student and Hudson resident who had returned after making millions of dollars in the coal industry. The "Ellsworth Era" was marked by significant construction, namely Seymour Hall (the newly appointed academic building), the Bicknell Gymnasium, and Ellsworth Hall, a dormitory and dining hall. In 1922, Western Reserve Academy became an all-boys' institution, staying this way for fifty years, until 1972, when girls were introduced into the junior class, once again becoming a co-ed institution.


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