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Taft School

The Taft School is a private coeducational school located in Watertown, Connecticut, United States. It enrolls approximately 600 students in grades 9–12.

Overview

History

The school was founded in 1890 as Mr. Taft's School (renamed to The Taft School in 1898) by Horace Dutton Taft, the brother of U.S. President William Howard Taft. Horace Taft's friend Sherman Day Thacher (the founder of California's Thacher School) inspired Taft to start his own boarding school. The school was initially headquartered in Pelham Manor, New York, but moved to Watertown, Connecticut in 1893.

Along with Lawrenceville, Groton, Milton, and its athletic rival Hotchkiss, Taft was one of the first New England schools founded during the great boom in boarding schools at the turn of the twentieth century. In the school's first generation, around half of the student body came from Connecticut and New York. However, Horace Taft came from a famous Ohio political family, and the school developed a reputation for preparing children of the Midwestern gentry for Yale's entrance examinations.

In the 1920s, Manhattan financier Edward Harkness donated $500,000 to launch a $2 million capital campaign for the school, enabling the construction of new campus buildings.

Horace Taft served as headmaster for 46 years. When he retired in 1936, Time described him as "the grandest" of prep school headmasters; he continued to teach civics at the school until his death in 1943. He was succeeded by Paul Cruikshank, who led the school for 27 years. In 1963, John Esty became headmaster and introduced the Independent Studies program the following year; he also oversaw the admission of the school's first female students in 1971. Lance Odden served as head of school from 1972 to 2001, followed by William MacMullen '78 from 2001 to 2023.

The school's admission rate was 16% in 2023. In 2015, Business Insider ranked Taft the 14th-most 'elite' boarding school in the US, based on a formula that equally weighted financial endowment, average SAT scores, and acceptance rate.

Student body

In the 2023–24 school year, Taft enrolled 580 students in grades 9–12, including 100 freshmen (in academy jargon, "lower mids"), 145 sophomores ("mids"), 155 juniors ("upper mids"), and 180 seniors ("seniors").

That year, 82% of the student body lived on campus. 45% of students identified as people of color and 18% came from abroad. 35% of students were on financial aid; 7.6% were on full scholarships; and 55% had previously attended public schools.

Campus

Taft is located on the grounds of a former hotel in Watertown, Connecticut; the school demolished the original hotel building in 1930. The Watertown campus began with six acres and has since grown to 226 acres. In 2018, Architectural Digest named Taft the most beautiful private high school campus in Connecticut.

The school owns several homes within the Watertown Center Historic District, which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. However, Taft's core campus is not part of the historic district.

The school's early campus buildings were designed in the Collegiate Gothic style by architect Bertram Goodhue of the firm Cram, Goodhue and Ferguson, with landscape planning by Frederick Law Olmsted Jr. In 1929–1930, architect James Gamble Rogers designed Charles Phelps Taft Hall, a dormitory whose Gothic detailing closely matched Goodhue's earlier work on the campus.

In 2002, Robert A. M. Stern designed a new dormitory that continued the campus's Collegiate Gothic vocabulary; the Yale Daily News noted that Taft chose Stern in part because they wanted to extend the red-brick Gothic style established by Goodhue and Rogers. In 2010, the Gund Partnership completed a $20 million renovation and expansion of the Horace Dutton Taft dining hall, adding of new construction to the original space; the project received LEED Gold certification.

Academics

In 1964, headmaster John Esty established the Independent Studies Program, which The Boston Globe described as "the first of its kind in the nation"; the program allows seniors to pursue a self-directed research project in any field while being excused from some regular coursework.

Finances

Endowment and expenses

Taft's financial endowment stood at $299.6 million as of June 30, 2023. In its Internal Revenue Service filings for the 2021–22 school year, Taft reported total assets of $447.9 million, net assets of $382.3 million, investment holdings of $283.8 million, and cash holdings of $24.1 million. Taft also reported $49.2 million in program service expenses and $10.4 million in grants (primarily student financial aid).

Athletics

Taft offers seventeen varsity sports and an intramural equestrian program. The school's athletic facilities include an 18-hole golf course, 16 tennis courts (four indoor), eight squash courts, two field houses, two tracks (one indoor, one outdoor), two ice hockey rinks (one Olympic-sized and one NHL-sized), and more than 10 playing fields.

Taft and its athletic rival Hotchkiss compete in the Founders League, a group of prep schools mostly located in Connecticut. Taft's athletic teams are known as the Rhinos (or the "Big Red Rhinos"), and its school colors are Yale blue and Harvard crimson.

Controversies

Sexual misconduct

In December 2012, the FBI arrested Richard Doyle, a theater and film teacher, on charges of receipt, distribution, and possession of child pornography. Investigators found over 4,000 images and six videos on his computer and storage devices; Doyle admitted to trading child pornography for at least two years. He pleaded guilty in December 2013 and was sentenced in August 2017 to five years in federal prison.

In 2016, a Boston Globe Spotlight investigation revealed that Charles Thompson, whom the school had hired as director of information technology in 2011, had been the subject of sexual misconduct complaints involving students at his previous employer, St. George's School, which had not disclosed the allegations. Taft placed Thompson on administrative leave and retained an independent investigator.

Racial incidents

On Martin Luther King Jr. Day in January 2018, a Black student found racial slurs written on a bulletin board on his dormitory door; other students reported homophobic notes and the vandalism of a painting. The school canceled classes and opened an investigation.

In June 2020, two recent alumni created the Black@Taft Instagram account, which collected accounts of racism and microaggressions at the school dating back to the 1990s. The account gained more than 2,300 followers, and over 900 alumni signed a letter calling on the school to take action. Taft responded by establishing an anti-bias, anti-racism caucus and creating an incident reporting system.

In literature

Kendra James's memoir Admissions: A Memoir of Surviving Boarding School (2022) recounts her experience as the school's first Black legacy student in the early 2000s. Esquire named it one of the best nonfiction books of 2022.

Notable alumni

References

External links