HACKLEY SCHOOL


'Hackley School' is a private college preparatory school located in Tarrytown, New York and is a member of the Ivy Preparatory School League. Founded in 1899 by wealthy philanthropist Mrs. Caleb Brewster, Hackley was intended to be a Unitarian alternative to the mostly Episcopal boarding schools throughout the Northeast. Since its founding, Hackley has dropped its sectarian affiliations and changed from all-boys to coed.[1] Hackley is divided into three schools on the same campus: The Lower School, The Middle School, and The Upper School.

Contents
History
Founding
Expansion
Destruction of Goodhue Memorial Hall
Interscholastic Sports
Alma Mater
Administration
Alumni
Faculty
Hackley in Media
External Links

History


Founding

During the 1890s, the American Unitarian leadership in Boston became increasingly concerned about the lack of Unitarian presence in secondary and college preparatory education. Unitarians controlled Harvard University, its president, Charles Eliot, was the leading lay-person in the Unitarian movement, and the faculty included numerous Unitarians. This situation may have made them complacent regarding secondary schools, but in time, it became clear that Unitarians would have to send their children to schools run by other Protestant sects if they wanted quality college preparatory education.
An opportunity arose in New York when Mrs. Caleb Brewster Hackley, a wealthy widow and leading supporter of the Unitarian movement, decided to give her summer mansion in Tarrytown, New York to a charity. She resided in New York City, and was a member of the Church of the Messiah. Hackley was friends with the church's minister, who proposed using the mansion as a school for boys. In the winter of 1898-1899, she met with Dr. Samuel Eliot of Boston, who later became the President of the American Unitarian Association, and several other prominent Unitarians. Mrs. Hackley liked the idea of a college preparatory school to serve the Unitarian community and any families interested in a liberal religious environment and wanted to use her home for this purpose. She provided substantial funding to refurbish the mansion for school purposes and to operate the school for several years. In the spring of 1899, a Board of Trustees was formed and very shortly thereafter it selected its first headmaster. The first students arrived in the autumn of 1899 and resided in the Hackley home, today called Hackley Hall.
Expansion

The home and grounds quickly proved inadequate to support a preparatory school. In the fall of 1899, Theodore Chickering Williams and Mr. Seaver Buck, the first headmaster and the first master hired, respectively, searched for additional land. They found a large estate for sale on the current grounds of [Marymount College], and purchased it with funds from Mrs. Hackley. The buildings on the estate were torn down immediately, and within a short period, construction began on the buildings that would eventually join to form the Hackley quadrangle. The first buildings constructed were Goodhue Hall, now the Kaskel library, and the Minot Savage building. They were in use for the first time in 1902-1903. The remaining buildings, including the Sarah Goodhue King Chapel and the Headmaster’s house, were completed by 1908. The architectural firm of Wheelwright and Haven designed the new school buildings and Downing Vaux provided contouring and plans for the first playing field and track.
Theodore Chickering Williams helped plan the school buildings and the curriculum and style of education. He had been a Unitarian minister in New York and was recognized as an important classical scholar. From the beginning Hackley was technically a Unitarian school, although it welcomed students from all faiths. The majority of Hackley’s early graduates went to Harvard University. A vigorous interscholastic sports program began during the first years with football already at the center of action in 1900-1901.
Hackley Hall, Mrs. Hackley's mansion, became the lower school and was eventually sold. It no longer exists, although one can find on the Marymount campus old stone gates which provided the entrance to the Hackley home. Throughout Hackley’s history there have been eleven headmasters and three acting headmasters. Inscribed above one of Hackley's doors is the phrase "Enter Here to Be and Find a Friend."
Destruction of Goodhue Memorial Hall

On August 4, 2007, a fire, sparked by an intense lightning storm, destroyed Goodhue Memorial Hall. The Kaskel Library and its 27,000 volumes (including over 2,000 recently purchased volumes), artwork, and non-book resources (CDs, DVDs, videos, magazines) and supplies meant to stock the new Lower School Library were lost. Both side wings of Goodhue Memorial Hall were also destroyed: The Upper School technology wing (which served as the English wing until 2000) lost over one hundred computers, four rooms, and irreplaceable artworks, including a clay sculpture of Mathew Bridwell. The wing that currently held the English department lost two classrooms and the department offices. While the fire gutted the roof and interiors, the stone facade of the building remained intact; rebuilding Goodhue is estimated to cost several million dollars.
[2][3][4]

Interscholastic Sports


'Fall' 'Winter' 'Spring'
Cross Country (boys and girls) Basketball (boys and girls) Baseball
Soccer (boys and girls) Swimming (boys and girls) Golf
Field Hockey (girls) Winter Track and Field Boys Lacrosse (boys and girls)
Football (boys) Collegiate wrestling Softball
Tennis (girls) Fencing (coed) Tennis (boys)
Squash (boys and girls) Outdoor Track and Field

Alma Mater


The Hackley alma mater is sung each year by the entire school at the convocation that opens the school year.
''Hail Alma Mater, sing we now thy praise and glory.''

''Hail to the spirit that will bless the free.''

''High on the hilltop where the seasons tell their story''

''Stand while the river floods and fills the sea.''

''Teach us to honor all thy paths of beauty.''

''Lead us forever in faith and in duty.''

''Sing we, Hail Alma Mater, may our voices ring forever,''

''Hackley, in honor of thee.''

Administration



★ Headmaster: Walter C. Johnson

★ Upper School Director: Beverley Whitaker

★ Middle School Director: Alona T. Scott

★ Lower School Director: Ronald A. Delmoro

Alumni


Noted alumni include:

Alan Seeger 1906, poet

Philip Johnson '23, ''architect''

Jim Kates '63 ''poet, translator''

Joe Klein '64, ''author, ''Primary Colors

Peter Strauss '65, ''actor''

Gene Pressman '68 ''author'' Chasing Cool

Alec Wilkinson '70 ''author'' The Happiest Man in the World

Chris Berman '73, ''ESPN sportscaster''

Keith Olbermann '75, ''host of ''Countdown with Keith Olbermann'' on MSNBC and former anchor of ESPN's ''SportsCenter

Ian R. Rapoport Sports Reporer, The Birmingham News

Andrew Jarecki '81, ''documentary filmmaker, ''Capturing the Friedmans

Cathy Schulman '83, ''producer of'' Academy Award ''winner for Best Picture, ''Crash

Dan Mackenzie '85, ''composer,'' Emmy Award Nominee, 2005

Eugene Jarecki '87, ''documentary filmmaker, ''Why We Fight

Jimmy Tate '87, ''actor, tap dancer''

Malcolm Forbes, ''editor of'' Forbes Magazine

George Hamilton, ''actor''

Faculty


Noted former faculty include:

Charles Tomlinson Griffes, American composer

Pavel Litvinov, Russian physicist, writer, human rights activist

Hackley in Media



Brooks Brothers and Polo Ralph Lauren have both done catalogue shoots on Hackley's majestic campus.

★ Hackley's campus was featured in the movies ''Presumed Innocent'', ''Kuffs'', and .

External Links



Hackley School Website

Private School Review

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