St. Albans School (Washington, D.C.)
St. Albans School (STA) is an independent college preparatory day and boarding school for boys in grades 4–12, located in Washington, D.C.[2] The school is named after Saint Alban, traditionally regarded as the first British martyr.[3] Within the St. Albans community, the school is commonly referred to as "S-T-A." It enrolls approximately 590 day students in grades 4–12, and 30 additional boarding students in grades 9–12, and is affiliated with the National Cathedral School and the co-ed Beauvoir, the National Cathedral Elementary School, all of which are located on the grounds of the Washington National Cathedral. St. Albans, along with the affiliated schools and the Washington National Cathedral, are members of the Protestant Episcopal Cathedral Foundation. It is regarded among the most prestigious secondary schools in the United States.
St. Albans School | |
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Address | |
3001 Wisconsin Ave NW 20016 United States | |
Coordinates | 38°55′43″N 77°4′17″W |
Information | |
Type | Private, Day & Boarding, College-prep |
Motto | Latin: Pro Ecclesia et Pro Patria (For Church and For State[1]) |
Religious affiliation(s) | Episcopal[2] |
Established | 1909 |
Sister school | National Cathedral School |
CEEB code | 090165 |
Headmaster | Jason F. Robinson |
Teaching staff | 69.6 (FTE) (2015–16)[2] |
Grades | 4–12[2] |
Gender | All male[2] |
Enrollment | 591 (2015–16)[2] |
Student to teacher ratio | 8.5 (2015–16)[2] |
Campus type | Urban[2] |
Athletics conference | Interstate Athletic Conference DCSAA |
Team name | Bulldogs |
Accreditation | MSA AIMS MD-DC |
Publication |
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Website | www |
The school mascot is the bulldog, a symbol adopted under the school's fourth headmaster, Canon Charles S. Martin, because of Martin's fondness for his pet bulldogs.[3] The St. Albans motto, "Pro Ecclesia et Pro Patria," translates to "For Church and Country."[3] St. Albans requires all students to attend Chapel twice a week in The Little Sanctuary. The school seeks to develop in its students a sense of moral responsibility through Chapel, its Honor Code, and a co-curricular social service program.
A 2004 article in The Wall Street Journal found that among U.S. schools, St. Albans had the 11th-highest success rate in placing graduates at 10 selective universities.[4] A 2015 article in Business Insider named St. Albans the smartest boarding school in the United States on the basis of average SAT scores.[5]
Approximately 80% of the faculty at the school have advanced degrees.[6] The school also maintains one writer-in-residence, who teaches English classes while developing his or her work. (A past writer-in-residence is Curtis Sittenfeld, who worked on her best-selling novel Prep while at St. Albans).[7]
History
The school was founded in 1909, with $300,000 ($7.2 million in 2015 dollars) in funding bequeathed by Harriet Lane Johnston, niece of President James Buchanan.[3] Initially, it was a school for boy choristers to the Washington National Cathedral, a program that the school continues today.[3]

The school opened its new Upper School building, Marriott Hall, in 2009–2010. The firm Skidmore, Owings, and Merrill LLP, designed the new building, which has been the subject of articles in numerous publications, including The Washington Post, The Architects Newspaper, Building Stone Magazine, Arch Daily, Architecture DC, Mid-Atlantic Real Estate Journal, Construction, School Planning & Management, and the American Society of Civil Engineers.[8]

Notable alumni

- Jonathan Agronsky '64, journalist and author[9][10]
- Malcolm Baker '87, professor at Harvard Business School and former Olympic rower[11]
- Charles F. Bass, United States Congressman from New Hampshire
- Evan Bayh '74, former United States Senator for Indiana[12][13][14]
- Ralph Becker, mayor of Salt Lake City[15]
- John Bellinger '78, Legal Adviser of the Department of State (2005–2009)[16]
- Odell Beckham Jr., current NFL Wide Receiver, attended 7th grade after his home town was struck by Hurricane Katrina.[17]
- James Bennet, '84 former editor-in-chief of the Atlantic Monthly magazine[18]
- Michael Bennet '83, United States Senator for Colorado[19][20]
- James Boasberg '81, District Judge on the United States District Court for the District of Columbia[21]
- Joshua Bolten '72, former White House Chief of Staff[22][13]
- William L. Borden '38, executive director of United States Congress Joint Committee on Atomic Energy[23]
- Matt Bowman, pitcher in Major League Baseball[24]
- Keith Bradsher '82, journalist, The New York Times chief Hong-Kong correspondent
- Brooke "Untz" Brewer '16, Former NFL athlete and world class sprinter[25]
- Clancy Brown '77, actor and former chairman of the board of Brown Publishing Company[26]
- Olin Browne '77, professional golfer, 3-time PGA Tour event champion[27]
- Garnett Bruce '85, opera director[28]
- Neil Bush '73, son of President George H. W. Bush, brother of President George W. Bush[13]
- Josh Byrnes, vice president of baseball operations for the Los Angeles Dodgers[29]
- Goodloe Byron '45, United States Congressman from Maryland's 6th District[30]
- Lee Caplin '65, entertainment executive, co-producer True Detective
- John Casey '57, novelist[31]
- Benjamin Chew '80, attorney[32] to media personalities Cher, Johnny Depp
- Michael Collins '48, Apollo 11 astronaut[33]
- Peter Cook, Bloomberg anchor and journalist
- Damon M. Cummings '27, United States navy officer and Navy Cross recipient
- Walter J. Cummings, Jr., Solicitor General of the United States from 1952 to 1953; judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit[34]
- Jonathan W. Daniels '18, White House Press Secretary, author[35]
- Eli Whitney Debevoise II '70, United States executive director of The World Bank[36]
- Brandon Victor Dixon '99, Tony-nominated Broadway actor[37]
- Peter Feldman '00, commissioner of the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission
- George M. Ferris, Jr. '44, president of the firm Ferris Baker Watts[38]
- Adrian S. Fisher, diplomat and lawyer, Legal Adviser of the Department of State (1949–1953)[39]
- Miles Fisher '02, television and film actor[40]
- Harold Ford Jr. '88, former United States Congressman, Fox News contributor, and current head of the Democratic Leadership Council[41][13][14]
- Rodney Frelinghuysen '64, United States Congressman from New Jersey[42][13]
- David Gardner '84, co-founder of The Motley Fool[43]
- Tom Gardner '86, co-founder of The Motley Fool[43]
- James W. Gilchrist, Maryland Assemblyman representing Montgomery County, Maryland[44]
- George H. Goodrich, justice, Superior Court of the District of Columbia
- Al Gore Jr. '65, former Congressman and United States Senator from Tennessee, Nobel laureate, and the 45th Vice President of the United States.[45][13][14]
- Donald E. Graham '62, former chairman of The Washington Post[46][13]
- Thomas N.E. Greville '27, mathematician
- Paul Greenberg '86, former CEO of CollegeHumor and current CEO of fashion magazine Nylon
- Ernest Graves, Jr. '41, lieutenant general, former director of Defense Security Cooperation Agency[47]
- Frederick Hauck '58, astronaut, commander of Space Shuttle Discovery[48]
- André Heinz '88, environmentalist
- Samuel Herrick '28, astronomer, professor at UCLA
- Bill Hobby '49, Lieutenant Governor of Texas 1973–1991[49]
- Stuart Holliday '83, former U.S. Representative for Special Political Affairs in the United Nations and President of Meridian International Center
- Jesse Hubbard '94, professional lacrosse player[50]
- Danny Hultzen '08, baseball pitcher, 2nd overall pick of the 2011 Major League Baseball Draft by the Seattle Mariners[51]
- Brit Hume '61, Fox News television anchor[52][53][13][14]
- Reed Hundt '65, former FCC Chairman[54]
- Prince Feisal bin Al Hussein of Jordan '81, son of King Hussein and Princess Muna al-Hussein, and the younger brother of King Abdullah II.[55]
- Adi Ignatius '76, editor-in-chief of Harvard Business Review.
- David Ignatius '68, Washington Post columnist, author of Body of Lies[56]
- Uzodinma Iweala '00, author[57]
- Jesse Jackson, Jr. '84, United States Congressman, son of the Rev. Jesse Jackson, Sr.[58][13][14]
- Steven Berlin Johnson '86, popular science author
- Bo Jones '64, former publisher and CEO of The Washington Post, director of the Associated Press[59]
- Draper L. Kauffman, past superintendent of the United States Naval Academy
- Thomas Kean '53, former governor of New Jersey, chairman of the 9/11 Commission, attended 4th and 5th grades[60][13]
- Edward Kennedy, Jr. '79, founder of the Marwood Group, son of senator Ted Kennedy
- Randall Kennedy '73, Harvard Law School professor[61]
- Tyler Kent, American diplomat convicted of spying for the Nazi Germany government during World War II
- John Kerry, United States Secretary of State, attended lower school for several years[14][53]
- Nick Kotz '51, journalist, author, and historian who won the Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting in 1968[62]
- Damian Kulash '94, lead singer of rock band OK Go[63]
- Robert D. Lamberton '60, classics scholar, poet, and translator, professor at Washington University in St. Louis
- Tom Ligon '58, character actor in Paint Your Wagon (film), Bang the Drum Slowly, The Young and the Restless, and Oz
- Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., United States Senator from Massachusetts, United States Ambassador to United Nations, South Vietnam, and Special Envoy to the Vatican,
- John Davis Lodge, Governor of Connecticut and former United States Ambassador to Spain, Argentina, and Switzerland
- Nick Lowery '74, former professional football player, Kansas City Chiefs[64]
- J. W. Marriott, Jr. '50, billionaire, chairman and former CEO of Marriott International[65][13]
- Ethan McSweeny, former artistic director of the American Shakespeare Center[66]
- Jay Pierrepont Moffat, Jr. '49, U.S. Ambassador to Chad
- Arthur Cotton Moore '54, architect known for the Washington Harbour development, renovation of the Thomas Jefferson Building, and the restoration of The Cairo.[67]
- Dave Nalle, political writer, vice chairman of the Republican Liberty Caucus
- Bill Oakley '84, toymaker, fast-food reviewer, former executive producer of The Simpsons[68][69][70]
- Jonathan Ogden '92, professional football player[71]
- Jameson Parker, former co-star of 1980s television series Simon & Simon[72]
- Michael J. Petrucelli, founder, Clearpath Inc., deputy director and acting director of US Citizenship and Immigration Services at the US Department of Homeland Security
- Laughlin Phillips '42, former director of The Phillips Collection[73]
- David Plotz '86, writer and editor at Slate[14]
- Ben Quayle, U.S. Congressman from Arizona and son of Dan Quayle[74]
- Manny Quezada, basketball player for Atlético Petróleos de Luanda[75]
- James Reston Jr. '59, journalist and writer
- John D. Rockefeller V '88, lecturer at Johns Hopkins University, eldest son of West Virginia Senator Jay Rockefeller
- Justin Rockefeller '98, political activist and fifth generation member of the Rockefeller family[76]
- James Roosevelt, son of Franklin Roosevelt, U.S. Congressman from California, attended and went on to graduate from Groton School[77]
- Kermit Roosevelt III '88, novelist, law professor University of Pennsylvania[78]
- Mark Roosevelt '74, superintendent of the Pittsburgh Public Schools, president of Antioch College and St. John's College[79]
- Alex Ross '86, music critic of The New Yorker, MacArthur Fellow[80]
- Luke Russert '04, NBC correspondent and XM Satellite radio host, son of Tim Russert,[81]
- Hib Sabin '53, American sculptor and educator[82]
- Barton Seaver '97, chef and author[83]
- Timothy Shriver '77, chairman of Special Olympics, son of Eunice Kennedy Shriver and Sargent Shriver[84]
- Bruce Smathers '61, former Florida Secretary of State, son of US Senator George Smathers
- Burr Steers, director of the film Igby Goes Down[85]
- William R. Steiger '87, chief of staff of the United States Agency for International Development[86]
- Andrew Stevovich '66, artist
- Ned Temko '70, editor of The Jewish Chronicle
- Russell E. Train '37, former director of the EPA, founder/chairman emeritus of World Wildlife Fund[87]
- James Trimble III '43, baseball player and marine, killed in action at Iwo Jima[88][89]
- Ian Urbina '90, journalist, The New York Times, senior investigative reporter, and director of The Outlaw Ocean Project.[90]
- Gore Vidal, author and writer, attended and went on to graduate from Phillips Exeter Academy[85][89]
- Peter Jon de Vos '56, former United States Ambassador to Mozambique, Cape Verde, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Tanzania, and Costa Rica[91]
- Antonio J. Waring Jr. '34, archeologist who defined Southeastern Ceremonial Complex
- John Warner, former United States Secretary of the Navy, five-term Senator from Virginia, attended a summer session[92]
- Josh Weinstein '84, former executive producer of The Simpsons[68]
- Jonathan Williams, poet, founder of The Jargon Society[93]
- John C. White '94, Louisiana Superintendent of Education since 2012[94]
- Sheldon Whitehouse, Rhode Island attorney general, U.S. Senator from Rhode Island, attended and went on to graduate from St. Paul's School
- David Whiting, journalist and film agent, who mysteriously died during production of The Man Who Loved Cat Dancing, was expelled in his junior year.[10]
- Thomas Wilner '62, lawyer at Shearman & Sterling who represented Guantanamo Bay detention camp detainees[95]
- Craig Windham, NPR radio journalist[96]
- Robert Wisdom '72, actor, played Bunny Colvin on HBO's The Wire[97]
- Paul Woodruff '61, classicist, professor, dean at the University of Texas at Austin
- Jeffrey Wright '83, Emmy and Tony Award-winning actor[98]
- Joon Yun '86, physician and hedge fund manager[99]
- Jeffrey Zients '84, director of the U.S. Office of Management & Budget, first Chief Performance Officer of the United States[100]
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External links
