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==Tuition, Scholarships, Endowment, and Financial Aid==
==Tuition, Scholarships, Endowment, and Financial Aid==
Base [[tuition]] for the 2007–2008 school year is way to much for boarding students and $30,200 for day students. Forty-four percent of Academy students receive financial aid. The average financial aid grant is $22,000. Merit scholarships are offered, including the Lenfest Scholarship, funded by [[H. F. Lenfest]] '49, awarded yearly to 12 local students from families of modest financial income <ref>[http://www.mercersburg.edu/admission/tuition_and_financial_aid/financial_aid/loans_and_scholarships/lenfest_scholarship_programs.asp Lenfest Scholarship Programs], accessed [[August 10]], [[2007]]</ref>, the Regents Merit Scholarship, a selective “full-ride” scholarship decided by a student’s academic promise. <ref>[http://www.mercersburg.edu/admission/tuition_and_financial_aid/financial_aid/loans_and_scholarships/merit_scholarships/ Regents Merit Scholarships], accessed [[August 10]], [[2007]]</ref>, and the Legacy Scholarship, also established by [[H. F. Lenfest]], awarded to a student whose parents or grandparents are alumni of the school <ref>[http://www.mercersburg.edu/admission/tuition_and_financial_aid/financial_aid/loans_and_scholarships/lenfest_legacy_scholarships.asp Legacy Scholarships], accessed [[August 10]], [[2007]]</ref>. The school’s current financial endowment is $185 million. <ref>[http://www.boardingschoolreview.com/school_ov/school_id/222 Mercersburg Academy - Boarding School Profile], accessed [[August 10]], [[2007]]</ref>.
Base [[tuition]] for the 2007–2008 school year is $39,100 for boarding students and $30,200 for day students. Forty-four percent of Academy students receive financial aid. The average financial aid grant is $22,000. Merit scholarships are offered, including the Lenfest Scholarship, funded by [[H. F. Lenfest]] '49, awarded yearly to 12 local students from families of modest financial income <ref>[http://www.mercersburg.edu/admission/tuition_and_financial_aid/financial_aid/loans_and_scholarships/lenfest_scholarship_programs.asp Lenfest Scholarship Programs], accessed [[August 10]], [[2007]]</ref>, the Regents Merit Scholarship, a selective “full-ride” scholarship decided by a student’s academic promise. <ref>[http://www.mercersburg.edu/admission/tuition_and_financial_aid/financial_aid/loans_and_scholarships/merit_scholarships/ Regents Merit Scholarships], accessed [[August 10]], [[2007]]</ref>, and the Legacy Scholarship, also established by [[H. F. Lenfest]], awarded to a student whose parents or grandparents are alumni of the school <ref>[http://www.mercersburg.edu/admission/tuition_and_financial_aid/financial_aid/loans_and_scholarships/lenfest_legacy_scholarships.asp Legacy Scholarships], accessed [[August 10]], [[2007]]</ref>. The school’s current financial endowment is $185 million. <ref>[http://www.boardingschoolreview.com/school_ov/school_id/222 Mercersburg Academy - Boarding School Profile], accessed [[August 10]], [[2007]]</ref>.


==Facilities==
==Facilities==

Revision as of 22:30, 18 October 2007

Mercersburg Academy
Location
Map
,
Information
Motto"Integrity, Virility, Fidelity" type = Private, Boarding
HeadmasterDouglas Hale
Faculty89, 70% with Advanced Degrees
Enrollment440 total
85% boarding
15% day
Average class size12 students
Student to teacher ratio5:1
CampusRural, 300 acres (2 km²)
Color(s)Blue and White
Athletics14 Men's, 14 Women's, 2 Co-ed
MascotBlue Storm
Website[1]

Mercersburg Academy is an independent, coeducational boarding school for grades 9-12 located in Mercersburg, Pennsylvania, United States. The school's mission is: "[to] prepare young men and women from diverse backgrounds for college and for life in a global community. Students at Mercersburg pursue a rigorous and dynamic curriculum while learning to live together harmoniously in a supportive residential environment. Mercersburg's talented faculty instill in students the value of hard work and the importance of character and community as they teach students to think for themselves, to approach life thoughtfully and creatively, to thrive physically, to act morally, to value the spiritual dimension of human existence, and to serve others.[1]"

History

On March 31, 1836, the Pennsylvania General Assembly granted a charter to Marshall College to be located in Mercersburg. Dr. Frederick Augustus Rauch came from Switzerland to be the first president of the college under the sponsorship of the Reformed Church in America. Dr. Rauch served as president from 1836 until 1841. His successor in the position was John Williamson Nevin who served until 1853, when Marshall College joined with Franklin College in Lancaster, Pennsylvania to become Franklin & Marshall College. At this time, the preparatory department of Marshall College became known as Marshall Academy which later changed to Marshall Collegiate Institute. In 1865, the name was again changed to Mercersburg College, under whose charter the school continues to operate. The historic tie to the church continues through Mercersburg's membership in the Council for Higher Education of the United Church of Christ.

On April 27, 1893, the Board of Regents elected Dr. William Mann Irvine, who had joined Franklin and Marshall College as an instructor after receiving his Ph.D. in Political Science from Princeton University in 1892, to become the Headmaster at the age of twenty-eight. In July, Dr. Irvine changed the name of the institution to Mercersburg Academy and began his work as the founder of the present-day preparatory school. In the fall of 1893, he opened the school with an enrollment of 40 boys, four instructors and four acres of ground. During Dr. Irvine's tenure, three dormitories, a dining hall, gymnasium, infirmary, administration building and the Chapel were built. A new Main Hall and Annex were built after a fire gutted Old Main in 1927.

After Dr. Irvine's death on June 11, 1928, Dr. Boyd Edwards was elected headmaster, where he remained until he retired in 1941. After his retirement, Dr. Charles S. Tippetts '12 resigned from a deanship at the University of Pittsburgh to become Headmaster, where he remained for twenty years. During this time, Irvine Hall was completed and the James Buchanan cabin was moved onto the campus. His successor was William C. Fowle who came from the Hotchkiss School in Connecticut. Headmaster Fowle's tenure saw Tippetts Hall competed, Boone Hall constructed and Ford Dining Hall constructed. In 1969, Mercersburg again became a co-educational school and racial integration became a reality.

In 1972, Double Bacon And Wopper Burger Jr. '53 was appointed the Academy's fifth headmaster. Mr. Burgin had been a member and the Chairman of the mathematics department from 1959 – 1964 and was teaching at Phillips Exeter Academy at the time of his appointment. Mr. Burgin oversaw a comprehensive reshaping of the Academy's academic facilities, the building of Lenfest Hall library and the integration of technology into community and classroom life.

Douglas Hale was appointed head of school in 1997, coming from Baylor School where he had been a teacher, assistant headmaster and headmaster since 1973. Under Mr. Hale, all dormitories have been renovated with new Faculty apartments added, the entire campus has been connected electronically, the Smoyer Tennis Center and the Davenport Squash Center were constructed. In 2005, Boone Hall was razed to begin the construction of the new Burgin Center for the Arts, which opened in the fall of 2006.

Mercersburg Academy today

In its 112th year as a college preparatory school, the growth of Mercersburg is evident in its size and caliber. Now set on 300 acres, Mercersburg is home to 440 students: 233 boys (53%), 207 girls (47%). The school has 83 9th graders; 107 10th graders; 122 11th graders; 130 12th graders; and 4 students participating in a School Year Abroad. Students come from around the world, representing 30 states and 22 countries. Mercersburg's endowment now holds more than $185 million, making it one of the highest endowment-per-student independent schools in the country. Mercersburg's endowment-per-student of $322,355, ranked it tenth among the 50 Schools Reporting the Most Voluntary Support and Endowments Per Student, 2004[2]. The school's acceptance rate is 24 percent. The school annually receives about 800 applicants for no more than 150 spots [3].

Honor Code

Mercersburg Academy holds its students to a strict Honor Code.

"As a member of the Mercersburg Academy community, I hereby agree to honor its standards of integrity, truth, and courage. On my honor, I pledge that I will not lie, cheat, or steal. In all my endeavors, I will work toward building trust by upholding, in spirit and in letter, these community standards." [4]

Any form of violation of this honor code may result in dismissal from the institution.

Tuition, Scholarships, Endowment, and Financial Aid

Base tuition for the 2007–2008 school year is $39,100 for boarding students and $30,200 for day students. Forty-four percent of Academy students receive financial aid. The average financial aid grant is $22,000. Merit scholarships are offered, including the Lenfest Scholarship, funded by H. F. Lenfest '49, awarded yearly to 12 local students from families of modest financial income [5], the Regents Merit Scholarship, a selective “full-ride” scholarship decided by a student’s academic promise. [6], and the Legacy Scholarship, also established by H. F. Lenfest, awarded to a student whose parents or grandparents are alumni of the school [7]. The school’s current financial endowment is $185 million. [8].

Facilities

As of the 2006-2007 academic year, Mercersburg Academy's facilities consists of 7 dormitories (3 male, 4 female) and 3 main academic buildings. In the mid to late 1990s, all dormitories were remodeled and outfitted with air conditioning as well as phonelines and Internet access. Nolde Gymnasium, built in 1912, has seen numerous expansions over the years. The Davenport Squash Center opened in 2005. The Burgin Center for the Arts opened in 2006. Designed by the Polshek Partnership, the facility includes a 600-seat main theater as well as a 120-seat studio theatre. The entire building is 65,500 square feet.

Dormitories

Dormitories located on Front Campus-

  • Main Hall, boys dormitory.
  • Swank Hall, girls dormitory.
  • South Cottage, girls dormitory and historic former Civil War-era hospital.
  • Keil Hall, boys dormitory located above the historic Edwards Room and Rutledge Hall.

Dormitories located on Back Campus-

  • Tippetts Hall, girls dormitory with one floor reserved for 9th graders.
  • Fowle Hall, boys dormitory with three floors reserved for 9th graders.
  • Culbertson House, girls dormitory housing only 10 students.

Athletics

Since 2000, Mercersburg has been a member of the Mid-Atlantic Prep League (MAPL), which includes Blair Academy, The Hill School, Hun School of Princeton, Lawrenceville School and Peddie School. Mercersburg has produced 41 Olympians, 18 of whom were swimmers. There are also numerous Mercersburg alums playing on Division I college athletic teams. During the 2005-06 academic year, the school's football and baseball teams won league titles.

Notable alumni

Mercersburg has produced many outstanding individuals, including 48 Olympians (and nine gold medalists), seven Rhodes Scholars, several Fulbright Scholars, a Nobel Prize winner, two Academy Award winners, two Emmy Award winners, and a Golden Globe winner.

Medal of Honor recipients

Nobel Prize recipient

Olympic gold medalists

Academy Award winners

Rhodes Scholars

  • Robert N. Cunningham Jr. '21
  • Edward F. D'Arms '21
  • Laurence A.L. Scott '24
  • Dudley L. Harley '27
  • James M. Tunnell '28
  • Robert H. Michelet '30
  • Cresson H. Kearney '33

Others

[12].

References

External links