The Webb School is a private coeducational college preparatoryboarding and day school in Bell Buckle, Tennessee, founded in 1870. It has been called the oldest continuously operating boarding school in the South. Under founder Sawney Webb's leadership, the school produced more Rhodes Scholars than any other secondary school in the United States.[1]
Mission
As expressed by William R. Webb, the school's mission is "To turn out young people who are tireless workers and who know how to work effectively; who are accurate scholars, who know the finer points of morals and practice them in their daily living; who are always courteous [without the slightest trace of snobbery]." (Bracketed text was removed from the official mission of the school in the late 20th century but is commonly added to oral recitations by faculty and students.)
After Vanderbilt University was founded in 1873, Webb School's "oldest and best boys" were able to enroll.[1]
Webb moved the school from Culleoka to its present-day location, a 145-acre campus in the small town of Bell Buckle, in 1886 after Culleoka incorporated and legalized the sale of alcohol in the new city.[1][2]
Sawney Webb's son W. R. Webb Jr., known as "Son Will", joined the school as a teacher in 1897 and became co-principal of the school with his father and uncle in 1908, unable to establish his own career. After their deaths (John Webb died in 1916 of a stroke and Sawney Webb in 1926 of old age), he became headmaster and remained in that position until his retirement in 1952.[3]
Webb began admitting girls as boarding students in 1973,[3] but earlier in its history Webb had allowed local girls to attend as day students.[4]
Allen Steele: Hugo Award-winning science fiction author
Robert McGill Thomas, Jr.: Pulitzer Prize nominated reporter for The New York Times renowned for his obituaries, some of which are compiled in the book 52 McG's: The Best Obituaries from Legendary New York Times Writer Robert McG. Thomas Jr.
^"Byron de la Beckwith Correspondence, Photographs, and Other Materials". SCOUT Special Collections Online at UT. University of Tennessee, Knoxville. Retrieved July 14, 2022. After a lackluster career in Greenwood's public schools, Beckwith was sent to the strict Webb School in Bell Buckle, Tennessee in 1936. The regime proved too difficult, however, and his Uncle Will arranged for him to transfer to the Columbia Military Academy in Columbia, Tennessee in 1938. Beckwith did not succeed at Columbia either, and graduated from the Greenwood public schools in 1940.