St. Paul Academy and Summit School (original) (raw)
Prep school in St. Paul, Minnesota, US
St. Paul Academy and Summit School (SPA) | |
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Location | |
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St. Paul, MNUSA | |
Coordinates | 44°55′34″N 93°10′23″W / 44.92611°N 93.17306°W / 44.92611; -93.17306 |
Information | |
Type | Private, day |
Motto | Shaping the minds and the hearts of the people who will change the world |
Established | SPA: 1900, Summit School: 1917, Merger: 1969 |
Head of School | Luis Ottley |
Enrollment | 925 Total275 K–5 (Lower School)228 6–8 (Middle School)422 9–12 (Upper School)128 Faculty |
Average class size | Lower School (K–5) 13Middle School (6–8) 15Upper School (9–12) 14 |
Student to teacher ratio | 7.2:1 |
Campuses | 2 |
Campus type | Urban |
Colors | Navy Blue and Vegas Gold |
Athletics conference | Independent Metro Athletic Conference (IMAC) |
Mascot | Spartans |
Tuition | Lower School (K–5) 34,840MiddleSchool(6–8)34,840Middle School (6–8) 34,840MiddleSchool(6–8)36,670 Upper School (9–12) $38,030[1] |
Website | spa.edu |
St. Paul Academy and Summit School is a private college preparatory day school in Saint Paul, Minnesota, United States, for students in grades K–12.
The school was established through a merger in 1969 of St. Paul Academy, a school for boys, and Summit School, a school for girls. St. Paul Academy was founded in 1900 and Summit School in 1917.[2] Accredited by the Independent Schools Association of the Central States, SPA is a member of the National Association of Independent Schools, the Cum Laude Society, The College Board, and is a founding member of the Association of College Counselors in Independent Schools.
Previous commencement speakers have included Al Franken, Wilhelmina Wright, Coretta Scott King, and Garrison Keillor.
The school consists of two campuses: the Goodrich Campus and the Randolph Campus.
- The Goodrich Campus, site of the old Summit School for girls, is the current home of the Lower School (grades K–5, ~290 students) and contains the Sarah Converse Auditorium, formerly the home of SPA theater productions. It is located at 1150 Goodrich Avenue.
- The Randolph Campus, site of the old St. Paul Academy for boys, is the current home of the Middle School (grades 6–8, ~240 students) as well as the Upper School (grades 9–12, ~380 students). Drake hockey arena, the Harry M. Drake Gallery, and the Huss Center for the Performing Arts are located on this campus, 1712 Randolph Avenue.
School hours are from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m., (8:45 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Wednesdays), with exceptions for after-school activities.
The origins of St. Paul Academy and Summit School lie in the late nineteenth century, when St. Paul was undergoing a transformation from a small river town into a bustling city. The population and building boom of the 1880s and 1890s laid the groundwork for a wide array of institutions and the emergence of civic and cultural leaders. Many of these leaders had strong ties to the East Coast, and they wished for their children an educational experience similar to the Eastern private day schools.
The Barnard School, a predecessor school to St. Paul Academy, was founded by Robert Arrowsmith, a Ph. D. from Columbia University. In an advertisement placed in the St. Paul Globe on August 28, 1887, the school promised a curriculum of “modern languages, drawing, and wood work would lead to thorough preparation for colleges and technical schools, West Point and Annapolis.” As Barnard School grew, a new school started almost across the street at the same time. The Freeman School, a predecessor to Summit School, was founded by four women in a brick two-story building. One half of the building was opened as a school for young girls, the other was started as a free kindergarten. The school was named Freeman School after Wellesley College President, Alice Freeman. In 1916, a group of mothers organized and purchased the school and Summit School was founded[3].
The Barnard School soon evolved into St. Paul Academy for boys. St. Paul Academy was officially founded in 1900 in a building at 155 Western Avenue in St. Paul, but the school soon grew out of this space, and undertook in 1916 to create the building at 1712 Randolph Avenue that still houses the Upper School today.
The Summit School for girls opened in this same time frame, offering a liberal arts education for the girls of St. Paul in 1917 at 655 Holly Avenue in St. Paul. In 1923 the Summit School moved to a larger brick building at 1150 Goodrich Avenue, now the home of the Lower School.
For more than six decades, Summit School and St. Paul Academy operated as sibling schools. As schools and American society as a whole moved towards coeducation in the 1960s, the two schools followed suit. In 1969, the Summit School and St. Paul Academy merged, combining curricula, faculty, and students in a process that was later referred to as "the Big Bang" of the school’s history. The intense work before, during, and just after the merger gave rise to a new chapter that fully embraced the future of schooling while drawing from both schools’ traditions.[4]
In the Upper School (grades 9–12), SPA has a college-preparatory liberal arts curriculum.[5] SPA teaches an independent curriculum that does not follow either the AP or IB curriculum models, though individual students may opt to take AP tests. Courses have been taught using Harkness tables, distinctive elliptical wooden tables that seat 12–15 students, since 2005.[6]
SPA competes in the Independent Metro Athletic Conference (IMAC), which is part of the Minnesota State High School League.The school mascot is a Spartan, and the school's main rivals are Breck School, Blake School, and Minnehaha Academy. SPA offers 15 varsity sports and 34 teams. The school also recognizes club sports, including Ultimate Frisbee, Trap Shooting, and Sailing.
SPA has the oldest varsity hockey squad in the state of Minnesota. The first official team was recorded in 1905. The opponents the team faced during the early years included local colleges St. Thomas as well as the University of Minnesota, which did not field a varsity team until a few years after the academy. The hockey team has won five Minnesota Independent School League (MISL) championships, in 1941, 1942, 1961, 1962, and 1974.
Tennis has a long and successful history at St. Paul Academy, Summit School and the merged St. Paul Academy and Summit School. A number of notable athletes have gone on to claim state championships, including Gina Suh '94 who won the Minnesota State Tennis Singles Championship five years in a row. The girls' program has made over 20 state appearances, claiming the state title in 1976, 1977, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1986, and 1988, while the boys' program has made thirteen appearances and won the state championship in 1993, 2004, 2007, 2008, 2022, 2023, 2024, and 2025.[7]
SPA currently has a Quiz Bowl team, which is registered with NAQT and participates in the Minnesota High School Quiz Bowl's East Division.[8] SPA sent its A team to the NAQT High School National Championship Tournament in 2014, and both its A and B team in 2015 and 2016. They have continued to send teams in the past years, with one team going in 2017 and 2018. They also have competitive math, chess, debate and science teams. As of the 2014–2015 debate season, the debate team has made the Minnesota State High School Debate Tournament 14 straight years and 17 out of the last 18 years.[9]
The Rubicon, the school's newspaper, is nationally renowned, having received the Pacemaker from the National Scholastic Press Association for ten years in a row and Crown awards from the Columbia Scholastic Press Association consecutively since 2015, the country's top awards for student journalism.[10] The newspaper is divided into two sections: the print, which publishes monthly, and the RubicOnline, which is updated daily and which has been recognized as a distinguished site by SNO every year since its inception. It has been represented by its staff at the Columbia Scholastic Press Association's annual conference at Columbia University, the Journalist Educators of America/National Scholastic Press Association's annual convention, and the yearly MN High School Journalism Convention. The Rubicon is also a member of the Quill and Scroll Honor Society, and new members are inducted at the end of every year.
- Laura Coates (1997) is an American attorney and legal analyst for CNN, as well as the host of the 11 p.m. hour of CNN Tonight. Since 2017, she has hosted a talk radio show, The Laura Coates Show, on SiriusXM's Urban View. In January 2021, The Laura Coates Show moved to SiriusXM's POTUS.
- Karen Ashe (1972) is director of Neurobiology of Alzheimer's Disease Research Laboratory at the University of Minnesota.
- Ann Bancroft (1974) was the first woman to successfully complete expeditions across the Arctic and Antarctic.
- Leo Cullen (1994) is a former soccer player.
- John Doar (1940) prominent civil rights attorney in the 1960s, who most notably defended James Meredith in his attempt to enroll in the then-segregated University of Mississippi. He was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2012.
- F. Scott Fitzgerald attended the school from 1908 to 1911, though was asked to leave and did not graduate from the school. His works include The Great Gatsby and This Side of Paradise.
- Bill Frenzel (1946) was a member of the United States House of Representatives from Minnesota.
- Christopher Gores (1996) played soccer professionally for a team in Puerto Rico.
- Reynolds Guyer (1953) invented the Nerf children's toys, along with inventing Twister.
- Stanley S. Hubbard (1951) is the founder of Hubbard Broadcasting, which owns TV stations across Minnesota, Wisconsin, New York, and New Mexico (including the Twin Cities ABC affiliate KSTP).
- Rebecca Jarvis (1999) is a financial reporter for CNBC and was a finalist on The Apprentice (Season 4).
- Dave Kansas (1985) was the chief operating officer of American Public Media Group, a position that he assumed in 2011. Prior, Kansas was a journalist living in London and working for The Wall Street Journal.
- Roger G. Kennedy (1944) served as Director of the National Park Service and of the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of American History. He was a Vice President of the Ford Foundation and has worked for the departments of Labor, Justice, Health and Human Services, and Education.
- Manuel Lagos (1990) Played soccer professionally and for the United States national team during the Olympics.
- Steven Levitt (1985) is the author of 2005 New York Times bestselling book Freakonomics. He led the SPA Quiz Bowl team to nationals two years consecutively.
- John C. Lilly (1933) was a neuroscientist, psychoanalyst, philosopher, and inventor, known for his research on dolphin communication and psychedelic drugs. His family is the namesake of SPA's Lilly Courtyard.
- Amos Magee (born 1971), soccer player, coach, and front office
- Anil Menon (1995) is an American physician and NASA astronaut.
- John Watson Milton is a Minnesota State Senator and writer.
- Joan Mondale (1948) was an author, advocate for the arts, and the Second Lady of the United States. She graduated from Summit School, the girls school associated with SPA (the two later merged to become St Paul Academy and Summit School).
- William Pedersen (1956), partner in Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates, is the lead architect on the Shanghai World Financial Center, one of the world's tallest buildings.
- Tony Sanneh (1990) is a professional soccer player who has won two Major League Soccer Cups and played every minute for the United States in the 2002 World Cup in Korea/Japan.
- Tim Sheehy (2004), U.S. Senator from Montana.
- John Tate (1942) is a number theorist and winner of the 2010 Abel Prize.
- Shirley Williams (attended 1940–43) was a politician and a House of Commons cabinet member in the United Kingdom
- Matthew Wolff is a graphic designer known for making soccer logos and jerseys.
- ^ "Tuition, Financial Aid & Scholarships | SPA: Affordable Independent School in St. Paul".
- ^ Official St. Paul Academy and Summit School Website
- ^ https://resources.finalsite.net/images/v1597078857/stpaulsummit/mmsmqqpoi30bj7fy2seo/SPAWalkingTour.pdf
- ^ https://www.spa.edu/about/history
- ^ 2006 SPA Profile
- ^ SPA's Upper School program
- ^ https://www.spaathletics.org/boys-tennis/
- ^ "St. Paul Academy – QBWiki".
- ^ "St. Paul Academy and Summit School: News » SPA debate team qualifies for State Tournament, continues a 14-year legacy". Archived from the original on January 18, 2015. Retrieved January 15, 2015.
- ^ https://www.rubiconline.com/the-rubicon-rubiconline-awards/.