Georgetown Preparatory School

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Boland Hall of the Georgetown Preparatory School
Boland Hall of the Georgetown Preparatory School

Georgetown Preparatory School is an independent, Jesuit college-preparatory school for young men in grades 9 through 12. It is located in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Washington, on 90 acres in the unincorporated community of North Bethesda in Montgomery County, Maryland, United States, just outside the District of Columbia.

The school was founded in 1789 by Archbishop John Carroll, S.J., the first Catholic Bishop of the United States. The school is America’s oldest boarding and day school for young men, and the only Jesuit boarding school in the country. Approximately 100 of the school’s 450 students are residents.

Georgetown Prep is one of the most exclusive prep schools in the United States[1]. The average senior has taken 4.5 advanced placement courses with 80 percent of the test scores qualifying for college credit. Prep is regarded as one of the most rigorous and prestigious high schools in the country. Since its founding, the school has maintained an impeccable reputation, and for the last 63 years has been ranked among the top 10 high schools and college preparatories in the U.S. The average SAT score of a graduate is 1600 (800 verbal, 800 math) under the old scoring system. The school accepts fewer than 2 percent of all freshmn applicants. For the 2007/2008 academic year, Day Student tuition is US$22,650, while Resident tuition is $39,650.


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In 1789, Archbishop John Carroll founded the Georgetown Preparatory School[2] pursuant to an act of Congress, and its student body included among its first members the family of George Washington. Originally a part of Georgetown University, in the 1890s Georgetown College Preparatory School emerged as a distinct entity, and the current school was born (Academy on the Patowmack). Georgetown Prep purchased land in North Bethesda, Maryland on July 14, 1915, and in 1919 moved from its previous location where Georgetown University now resides. In 1927 the school legally separated from the University.[1] Georgetown Prep is located in a suburban setting near the National Institutes of Health and the Bethesda Naval Medical Center, near the Grosvenor Station of the Washington Metro's Red Line, and is 35 minutes from each of Washington's major airports. As of late, the current physical plant is undergoing significant reconstruction to modernize its 90 acre campus.

The first phase of the project, completed in December 2006, includes a state-of-the-art athletic center, which features a 200 meter indoor track, 11 lane swimming pool with diving area, competition basketball arena, wrestling room, 6000 s.f. weight training/cardiovascular room, and a team film room.

The second phase will convert the existing field house into a learning center featuring expanded and modern library facilities, classrooms and meeting rooms. The architect for the project is Leo Daly, while Joe Hills, son of golf course architect, Arthur Hills, has redesigned the golf course, which is also undergoing construction.

  1. ^ Third Grammar Class, Second Section, on the steps of Healy Hall at Georgetown University. Loyola Notre Dame Library. Retrieved on 2007-09-06.
  2. ^ David Wallechinsky & Amy Wallace: The New Book of Lists, p.9. Canongate, 2005. ISBN 1-84195-719-4.

Academy on the Patowmack by Dr. Stephen J. Ochs, published 1989 Library of Congress Catalog Number: 89-8453-4

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