The Shipley School is an independent pre-K–12 college preparatory school in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, United States, approximately 10 miles west-northwest of Philadelphia.
History
Hannah Shipley, Elizabeth Shipley, and Katharine Shipley, all sisters, founded The Shipley School in 1888 as a preparatory school for Bryn Mawr College, a women's college located directly across the street.[6] The Shipley sisters were strong-willed, highly educated Quaker women who created the school to pass on their values to similarly minded young women.[6] The school opened in the fall of 1894 with six students and nine faculty members.[6]
By the 1940s, Shipley had expanded the student body to 341 students.[6] At this time, about half of all Upper School students were boarders hailing from all over the country and from Europe, Asia, Russia, the Middle East, and Latin America.[6]
During the 1970s and 1980s, Shipley discontinued its boarding department and began to admit male students.[6] The last boarders graduated in 1982, and by 1984 the school was fully coeducational with equal numbers of girls and boys.[6]
The Shipley School has three divisions: Lower School (pre-kindergarten through grade 5), Middle School (grades 6 through 8), and Upper School (grades 9 through 12).
Notable alumni
This article's list of alumni may not follow Wikipedia's verifiability policy. Please improve this article by removing names that do not have independent reliable sources showing they merit inclusion in this article AND are alumni, or by incorporating the relevant publications into the body of the article through appropriate citations.(January 2023)
^Stein, Linda (3 December 2013). "Young Villanova singer to perform at World Cafe Live". Main Line Media News. Archived from the original on 26 September 2021. Retrieved 2020-07-20. "I started writing my own music when I was 6," he said. "That really ignited my passion for music," said the Villanova native who is in ninth grade at The Shipley School.
^Gensler, Howard (28 March 2016). "Shipley alumna Jessica Knoll says gang rape in her best-selling novel was real". Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved 23 June 2020. Jessica Knoll, author of the best-selling novel Luckiest Girl Alive revealed Tuesday that the harrowing gang rape she depicted in her book wasn't fiction at all. It had happened to her, when she was a student at the prestigious Shipley School in Bryn Mawr.
^Wisehart, Morgan. "The Death of the High School Band". Radnorite. Retrieved 2020-07-20. You know a kid who's released a few songs, your friend has some locked diss tracks posted, not forgetting the mash-ups created by your next door neighbor, Chris Comstock, A.K.A Marshmello (Shipley; class of 2010).