The Darrow School | |
Streetaddress: | 110 Darrow Road |
City: | New Lebanon |
County: | Columbia County |
State: | New York |
Zipcode: | 12125 |
Country: | United States |
Schooltype: | Independent, Boarding & Day |
Denomination: | Non-denominational |
Founded: | 1932 |
Oversight: | Board of Trustees |
Chairperson: | Alexa Seip |
Staff: | 52 |
Teaching Staff: | 31 |
Grades: | 9-12 |
Gender: | coed |
Enrollment: | 110 |
Average Class Size: | 8-9 |
Ratio: | 4:1 |
Houses: | Ann Lee, Brethrens', Hinckley, Neale, Meacham |
Song: | "Simple Gifts" |
Athletics: | Basketball, cross-country, lacrosse, soccer, softball, tennis, ultimate frisbee, outdoor education, alpine skiing, fitness |
Athletics Conference: | HVAL, NEPSAC |
Mascot: | Darrow Ducks |
Accreditation: | MSACS |
Publication: | Peg Board |
Affiliation: | NAIS, TABS, NYSAIS, NYBSA |
Head Of School: | Andrew J. Vadnais |
Endowment: | $3 million |
Language: | English |
Campus Size: | 365acres |
School Colors: | Maroon |
Darrow School is a co-educational college-preparatory school for boarding and day students in grades 9-12 and PG (post-graduate). It is located in New Lebanon, New York.
Darrow opened in the fall of 1932 as the Lebanon School for Boys. In 1938 president Charles S. Haight died and C. Lambert Heyniger purchased the school, becoming its headmaster and treasurer. Heyniger was a Princeton alumnus who had taught as a missionary in China and then pursued graduate study at Columbia University before joining General Motors. He renamed the school in the Shaker tradition, after a family prominent among the religious colony.[1]
In 1963, three Darrow students set a fire and destroyed the century-old dining hall and fire leveled the 156-year-old gymnasium. Both fires threatened dormitories housing 175 pupils. The boys had hoped school officials would send all the pupils home until repairs were made.[2]
In late 2023, the school's precarious financial situation almost led to closure.[3]
The campus is situated on the original site of the Mount Lebanon Shaker Village, a National Historic Landmark.[4] It spans over 365 acres of land, with 26 buildings, tennis courts, playing fields, ponds, orchards, pastures, marshlands, and a vast forest.
The school currently enrolls 110 students from across the United States and beyond.
Student participate in a number of competitive and non-competitive sports:[5]
The strong visual traces of Shaker austerity stand in contrast with the modern and less conventional morés of some affluent students raised in such different moral settings. In an interview, teacher Ed Noggle stated that a fascination with ghosts resulted. "These young people," Noggle says, "are very much of this world, very sensual, sexual beings. It has always been a matter of 'Ha, ha, what would the Shakers do if they could see all this? They'd roll over in their graves.'"[6]