Lawrenceville School was founded in 1810 as the Maidenhead Academy by Presbyterian clergyman Isaac Van Arsdale Brown. One of the oldest preparatory schools in the United States, it has had several names, including Lawrenceville Classical and Commercial High School[4] and Lawrenceville Academy.[5]
In 1883, the John Cleve Green Foundation purchased the school from its aging headmaster Samuel Hamill and renamed it The Lawrenceville School.[6] Green, who had died in 1875, was born in the village of Lawrenceville and was one of Maidenhead Academy's original students.[7] A successful merchant, he amassed a large fortune investing in railroads, importing tea and textiles, and exporting opium to China.[7] With no surviving children, much of his estate went to charitable causes.[8]
The trustees of the Green Foundation, including Green's widow Sarah, brother Caleb, nephew Charles, and friend John T. Nixon, aimed to turn Lawrenceville into a college-preparatory institution "with a more elite student body."[9] With $1.25 million to spend (approximately $40 million in 2024 dollars),[10] they hired Presbyterian minister James Cameron Mackenzie to study the public schools of the United Kingdom, and later appointed him Head of School.[8] Mackenzie's British-inspired innovations included Lawrenceville's house system, "the [first] small-unit housing plan ... in America."[8][11] He argued that a "home-like atmosphere was better for an adolescent boy and made him a better student."[8] Upon his return to the United States, the trustees commissioned a new campus from Frederick Law Olmsted and Peabody and Stearns, which has since been designated a U.S. National Historic Landmark District.[8][12]
The 1883 reorganization of Lawrenceville successfully elevated the school's profile and turned it into nearby Princeton University's most reliable feeder school. Princeton president James McCosh had been searching for a Mid-Atlantic alternative to New England boarding schools, which he thought funneled their best students to New England schools such as Harvard.[13] He used John Cleve Green's fortune to fill this gap. Green had been one of Princeton's most important donors;[7] his great-great-great-grandfather Jonathan Dickinson had founded Princeton in 1746.[14] Accordingly, the new Lawrenceville School was established "for the express purpose of preparing students for Princeton."[15]
Lawrenceville was a large success; the school sent 20 students to Princeton in 1886 alone, and enrollment leaped from 112 students in 1883 to 362 by 1898.[16] The school's successful relaunch marked the start of a large boom in the American boarding school industry, which also included Groton (founded 1884), Taft (1890), Hotchkiss (1891), Choate (1896), St. George's (1896), Middlesex (1901), Kent (1906), and Loomis (1914).[17]
In 1936, Lawrenceville adopted the Harkness system of seminar-based classes. Time magazine reported that Edward Harkness offered the school "a blank check" to adopt his preferred system, which Exeter had previously adopted in 1930.[21]
When Ivy League schools refocused their admissions practices on academic excellence in the 1950s and 1960s, the admissions director at Yale University was R. Inslee Clark Jr., a former Lawrenceville faculty member.[22][23]
Lawrenceville admitted its first two African-American students in 1964, one year after the longtime president of the board of trustees (an opponent of integration) stepped down.[24] Upon their admission, the new board president remarked that Lawrenceville was the last major American boarding school to admit students of color. In 2024, the school renamed the atrium of the school gym (previously named for the earlier board president) to honor its first two black students. That year, 55% of the student body were classified as non-white.[25] In the 2021-22 school year, the school reported that of its 818 students, 371 (45.4%) were white, 159 (19.4%) were Asian, 79 (9.7%) were Black, 50 (6.1%) were Hispanic, and 159 (19.4%) were multiracial. The survey did not permit the school to classify its students in multiple categories.[2]
Lawrenceville began admitting girls in 1987.[26] In 1999, the student body elected its first female student body president, Alexandra Petrone; in 2003, Elizabeth Duffy was appointed the School's first female headmaster; and in 2005, Sasha-Mae Eccleston '02 became Lawrenceville's first alumna to win a Rhodes Scholarship.[citation needed]
21st century
In 2001, The New York Times wrote that Lawrenceville was "[o]nce - and perhaps still - as much a symbol of the establishment as Far Hills or the Social Register," but was currently trying "to reinvent itself as an instrument of meritocracy rather than aristocracy."[27] The school's admissions rate was 20.5% in the 2017-18 school year.[28] Applications increased nearly 20% during the COVID-19 pandemic, "with part of the increase driven by Black applicants and families seeking financial aid."[29]
In 2010, Lawrenceville set the world record for the largest custard pie fight.[30]
Tuition and fees for the 2024-25 school year are $79,500 for boarding students and $65,420 for day students.[32] From 2010 to 2014, Business Insider ranked Lawrenceville as America's most expensive private high school.[33] However, the school commits to provide need-based financial aid covering 100% of an admitted student's demonstrated financial need.[32]
In the 2023-24 school year, 34% of the student body was on financial aid, with an average boarding aid grant over $60,000 and an average day grant over $44,000.[34] In the 2024-25 school year, Lawrenceville reported 189 families with boarding students on scholarship. 64 of these families had household incomes under $125,000/year; after financial aid, they paid an average contribution of $703. 36 families had household incomes over $350,000/year, with an average contribution around $36,000. The school did not provide corresponding statistics for day students.[35]
Endowment and expenses
Lawrenceville does not publicly report the size of its financial endowment. However, from 2016 to 2021, its endowment increased from $381.1 million to $632.9 million.[36][37] In its IRS filings for the 2021-22 school year, Lawrenceville reported total assets of $1.06 billion, net assets of $937.7 million, investment holdings of $631.0 million, and cash holdings of $78.0 million. The school also reported $65.0 million in program service expenses and $15.5 million in grants (primarily student financial aid).[38]
Lawrenceville has attracted several major donors in the 21st century. In 2017, Alibaba founder Joseph C. Tsai '82 and his wife Clara Wu contributed the largest gift in school history.[39] The exact size of the gift was undisclosed, but it was larger than the $60 million donation from Janie and Henry Woods in 2007.[40]
In 1986, the old campus core of Lawrenceville School (built in 1884–85) was declared a National Historic Landmark.[44][43] The landscape designer Frederick Law Olmsted planned the campus and grounds, and the Peabody & Stearns architectural firm designed the buildings, including Memorial Hall (now Woods Memorial Hall), which the National Park Service cited for the "richness of [its] materials" and "the high quality of the decorative details."[8][45] The campus core also includes a gymnasium, the headmaster's house, the Circle House dormitories, and a chapel. The landmark covers 17.74 acres;[8] the present-day campus includes over 700 acres.[46]
Lawrenceville utilizes a house system, similar to many British schools.[47] Students reside in four distinct groups of Houses—the Lower School, the Crescent (girls), the Circle (boys), and the Fifth Form (Senior) Houses.[48] Faculty members are associated with each House.[49]
The Circle Houses were designed by Peabody and Stearns, as part of the original campus plan, and are part of Lawrenceville's National Historic Landmark.[50][51] Four Crescent House dorms designed by Short and Ford Architects of Princeton, New Jersey, were opened in 1986; a fifth opened in 2010.[citation needed]
Facilities
There are 38 major buildings on Lawrenceville's campus, including the Bunn Library, which has space for 100,000 volumes.
Lawrenceville has 18 athletics fields, a nine-hole golf course, 12 outdoor tennis courts, 2 1⁄4-mile (400 m) all-weather and indoor tracks, a boathouse, a hockey arena,[52] and a ropes course. During the summer, Lawrenceville is a popular site for youth sports camps and several academic programs for students and teachers, including the New Jersey Scholars Program. The school recently finished building the Tsai Commons and Field House, which comprises a new dining hall, new community space, and additions to existing athletic facilities; this project was completed and opened for the first time in the 2024-25 school year.[53][54]
In the spring of 2012, the school began to draw its energy needs from a solar farm, which consists of a nearly 30-acre, net-metered, 6.1-megawatt solar facility.[55]
The school operates the Big Red Farm, a working agricultural facility with three greenhouses, 4 acres (1.6 ha) of farmland, 20 acres (8.1 ha) of pastureland for the school's sheep, chickens and pigs, and several honey-producing beehives.[56]
Gallery
The Bunn Library
The Lavino Field House, home of Lawrenceville athletics (now part of the Tsai Field House)
Fathers Building (foreground) and the Mackenzie Building (background; admissions)
Dawes House, the freshman girls’ dorm, split into the Cromwell and Perry Ross houses
Affiliations
Lawrenceville is a member of the Eight Schools Association, a group of leading American secondary schools informally founded during the 1973–74 school year and formally established in 2006.[57][58] Lawrenceville is also a member of the Ten Schools Admissions Organization.[59] The school was formerly part of G20 Schools, an international group of secondary schools.
Lawrenceville is affiliated with The Island School in Cape Eleuthera, The Bahamas, to which it sends students for semesters abroad.[60] Island School was founded by a former Lawrenceville teacher.[61]
In the fall of 2014, L10 News, the school's weekly ten-minute newscast, was founded on Lawrenceville's YouTube channel and Facebook page.
Other student-run publications include The First Amendment, a monthly political magazine founded in 2010, The Ledger, a semesterly business magazine, LMAG, a semesterly fashion magazine, In the Margins, a Diversity magazine, The Contour, a newspaper on global issues, El Artículo, a Spanish publication, The Calliopean, a journal of literary criticism, and The Lit, a literary magazine published once a term, three times a year. The Lit was founded in 1895 by author Owen Johnson, who went on to write the Lawrenceville Stories.[62] Annual student publications include The Lawrenceville Historical Review, the school's history periodical, Olla Podrida, the school yearbook; Lawrencium, the science research journal; and Prize Papers, a compilation of the best academic work in the English Department by that year's IV Form (junior) class. There is also a WLSR radio club.[63]
The Lawrence
The school's weekly, The Lawrence, is the third oldest secondary school newspaper in the United States, after The Phillipian and The Exonian. The Lawrence has been published regularly since 1881. Students make up the editorial board and all decisions for the paper, consulting with two faculty advisors at their discretion.[64]
The Lawrence has won numerous awards, including the Columbia Journalism Award in consecutive years.[63] In 2019, The Lawrence also won an editorial award from Youth Journalism International.[65] Notable contributors include sportswriter Bob Ryan in 1964[66] and businessman Joseph Tsai.
Lawrenceville competes with other schools in baseball, basketball, crew, cross-country, fencing, field hockey, football, golf, hockey, indoor and outdoor track, lacrosse, soccer, softball, squash, swimming, tennis, volleyball, water polo, and wrestling. In addition, the School offers a variety of intramural sports, including Ultimate Disc for the girls' Crescent Houses and 8-man flag football for the boys' Circle Houses.[citation needed]
Hill School rivalry
Lawrenceville's rival is The Hill School of Pottstown, Pennsylvania, another member of the Mid-Atlantic Prep League.[67] On the first or second weekend of November during "Hill Weekend," the two schools celebrate the nation's eighth-oldest high school football rivalry and fifth-oldest private school rivalry, dating back to 1887.[71]
Athletic achievements
In the spring of 2015, the Lawrenceville Boys' varsity crew team won the MAPL League Championship, beating out Peddie, Hun, and Blair;[72] placed first at the US Rowing Mid-Atlantic Youth Championship;[73] and then went on to place 4th at the US Rowing Youth Nationals held in Camden, NJ. The crew was selected for the Henley Royal Regatta and is widely regarded as the greatest crew in the school's history.[74] Multiple members of this crew either went on to race for the United States Jr. National Team or row at D1 universities such as Cal, Wisconsin, Yale, Georgetown, and Northeastern,[75] or the United States Jr. National Development Team. In the fall of 2010, the Lawrenceville boys' varsity crew team won the Head of the Christina Regatta in Delaware,[76] then placed 14th in a field of 75 at the Head of the Charles Regatta in Boston, Massachusetts, later in the season.[77]
In the spring of 2008, the Lawrenceville boys' and girls' varsity track and field team completed its season undefeated, placing first in the NJISSAA and MAPL.[citation needed] In the winter of 2011, the 4x200 team was the fastest in the nation, earning each one of them the status of All-American.[78] By January 2014, the Lawrenceville boys' varsity track team had won 103 dual meets in a row; the boys' team has not lost a dual meet, a Prep State A championship, or the MAPL championship since 2006.[79] In winter 2014, the 4x55 Shuttle Hurdle Relay team was ranked number 2 in New Jersey and number 3 in the nation.[78]
On November 6, 2005, the Lawrenceville girls' varsity field hockey team defeated Stuart Country Day School 2–1 to capture their third straight Prep A state championship. On November 5, 2006, the varsity field hockey team defeated Stuart Country Day School 1–0 to capture their fourth straight Prep A state championship. In 2007 they tied rival Stuart Country Day School for a shared victory in their fifth straight Prep A state championship with a 2–2 tie on a late Lawrenceville goal.[80]
On February 12, 2006, the Lawrenceville varsity boys' squash team won the National Championship for the third year in a row.[81]
In May 2006, the boys' varsity baseball team won the New Jersey Prep A championship over Peddie School in a doubleheader (14-0 and 6–1), earning their second state championship in three years.[citation needed] Lawrenceville defeated Peddie again in the 2010 finals to win its second consecutive Prep A title.[82]
In May 2023, the boys' varsity lacrosse team won the Prep Nationals championship game over Brunswick School by a score of 14-13 in double overtime. They finished the season on an 18-game winning streak, to end with a record of 19-1.[83]
^Karabel, Jerome (2006). The Chosen: The Hidden History of Admission and Exclusion at Harvard, Yale, and Princeton (Revised ed.). New York: Mariner Books. p. 59.
^Baltzell, E. Digby (1987). The Protestant Establishment: Aristocracy and Caste in America (Paperback ed.). New Haven, NH: Yale University Press. pp. 127–29.
^Brinkley, Alan. "The End of an Elite", The New Republic, June 7, 2004. Accessed March 16, 2015. "Consider the experience of R. Inslee Clark, who became director of admissions at Yale in 1965. Clark had the typical profile of a senior Ivy League administrator of his time. He was a Yale College graduate, an alumnus of Skull and Bones (the college's most elite secret society), and a former teacher at the Lawrenceville School."
^Danner, Christi; and Stanger, Melissa. "The 50 most expensive private high schools in America", Business Insider, September 15, 2015. Accessed November 19, 2015. "For the first time, The Lawrenceville School in Lawrenceville, New Jersey, was not the most expensive on our list, but instead was overtaken by another northeastern school: the Salisbury School in Connecticut."
^ ab"Lawrenceville School". National Historic Landmark summary listing. National Park Service. Archived from the original on February 25, 2009. Retrieved June 22, 2008.
^"The Lawrenceville School Signs Six Megawatt Solar Power Purchase Agreement with TurtleEnergy"Archived August 26, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, Lawrenceville School News, September 3, 2010. Accessed July 27, 2011. "Fully operational, the solar array will produce 8,500 megawatt-hours annually of clean electricity or more than 90 percent of the School's needs, offset 5,300 short tons (4,800 t) of CO 2, and provide a setting to teach sustainable energy and the use of materials, land, and water in ways that promote ecological literacy and sustainability. The natural slope of the 30-acre site, currently part of a 268-acre (1.08 km2) farm that is a part of Lawrenceville's 700-acre campus, will make the solar farm invisible from Route 206 and only partially visible from Lewisville Road."
^Big Red Farm, Lawrenceville School. Accessed March 29, 2023. "The Farm consists of 4 acres of tilled land, 20 acres of pasture, 3 greenhouses, and a demonstration garden next to the school dining hall."
^Ross, Rosemarie. "Hill ends season with key victory"[permanent dead link], Mercury (Pennsylvania), November 13, 2005. Accessed October 31, 2007. "In the game that annually means the most to them, it was near total Blues dominance as visiting Hill routed arch rival Lawrenceville, 41-18, Saturday to take home the silver trophy bowl for the second straight year. This was their 103rd showdown in a rivalry that started in 1887."
^ abHome Page, MileSplit NJ. Accessed May 10, 2015.
^"Record-Setting Day For Big Red Track & Field"Archived May 18, 2015, at the Wayback Machine, The Lawrenceville School, January 22, 2014. Accessed May 10, 2015. "With wins on Saturday against the Pennington School, Robbinsville High School, Lenape High School, and Hamilton High School West, the boys' varsity indoor track team secured 103 consecutive dual meet victories for the School's boys' track and field program."
^Alden, Bill. "Johnson's Speed Makes a Big Difference as Stuart Field Hockey Shares Prep Crown", Town Topics, November 7, 2007. Accessed July 28, 2011. "Late in the second half, Johnson raced down the sideline past the Stuart bench and split the Big Red defense, helping the Tartans to score and take a 2-1 lead with 7:30 remaining in regulation. Lawrenceville, though, knotted the game at 2-2 with a disputed goal that came with 2:32 remaining in the second half. The heated contest went into overtime and Johnson was stymied as she was carded in the first overtime. After a tearful scene on the bench, Johnson eventually returned to the game and made several runs into the heart of the Lawrenceville defense. But the efforts of Johnson and her teammates weren't enough to break the deadlock and the game ended in a 2-2 tie with the teams being named co-champions."
^Staff. "Navy Squash to Open 2006-07 Campaign on West Coast", CSTV, November 2, 2006. Accessed September 4, 2011. "Mattsson, who battled George in the title game of the Barb Trophy, is a product of The Lawrenceville School who also turned out Navy junior squash standout Jeff Sawin (Haverford, Pa.). Mattsson was a member of the 2004, '05, and '06 squash teams that were crowned National Champions and served as team captain his senior season."
^Litsky, Frank. "Ken Keuffel, 82, a Champion of the Single-Wing Offense, Is Dead". The New York Times, February 23, 2006. Accessed November 29, 2024. "Ken Keuffel, the head football coach for 21 years at the Lawrenceville School in New Jersey and for 6 years at Wabash College and one of the last exponents of the single-wing offense, died Sunday at the University Medical Center in Princeton, N.J. He was 82 and lived in Lawrenceville, outside Princeton.... Kenneth William Keuffel (pronounced KOY-fell), a native of Montclair, N.J., started his college career in 1943 as a Princeton fullback, then left for service in the Army Air Forces."
^Johnson, Malcolm. "Regaining The Spirit Of Prep School Stories", Hartford Courant, November 15, 2001. Accessed May 10, 2015. "The quintessential manifestations of these books for boys, still available and filmed for PBS in 1992, are Owen Johnson's The Lawrenceville Stories, which unfolded in a real prep school and centered on the fictional 'Dink' Stover, who metamorphosed into a hero and a member of Skull and Bones, the Yale secret society of the presidents Bush."