Miss Porter's School

Miss Porter's School
Miss Porter's School
Mainb.jpg
Puellae venerunt. Abíerunt mulieres.
Location
Farmington, Connecticut, USA
Information
Type Independent, boarding
Religious affiliation(s) none
Established 1843
Head of School Dr. Katherine G. Windsor
Faculty 60
Gender female
Enrollment 322 total
198 boarding
124 day
Average class size 11
Student to teacher ratio 8:1
Campus 55 acre township campus
Color(s) Green and White
Athletics 18 Interscholastic sports
Mascot Fighting Daisy (unofficial)
Average SAT scores 635 verbal
620 math
646 writing  (2010)
Endowment $85 million
Annual tuition $45,100 boarding
$35,450 day
Website

Miss Porter's School, sometimes simply referred to as Porter's or Farmington, is a private college preparatory school for girls, aged 14–18, located in Farmington, Connecticut. It was founded by education reformer Sarah Porter in 1843, with an eye to educating the elite young women of the Eastern seaboard.

Contents

History

Sarah Porter founded Miss Porter's School in 1843. Management passed onto her nephew, Robert Porter Keep, after her death in 1900. The school was incorporated as a non-profit institution in 1943.

Athletics

Fall Interscholastics

Winter Interscholastics

Spring Interscholastics

Porter's Terminology

  • Big-D - Formal Dress
  • Daeges Eage - yearbook, loose translation from Old English for daisy, "the day's eye."
  • Haggis Baggis - school literary magazine
  • Little-D - Semi-Formal Dress
  • Milk Lunch - Morning Break
  • Mountain Day - School holiday granted once a semester
  • Nova Nine - 9 members of student council
  • P-lettes - Perilhettes, Senior Singing Group
  • Prescott - Visiting Speaker Program sponsored by The Prescott Fund
  • Salma - Salmagundy, School Newspaper
  • Sit-Down Dinner - Semi-Formal Dinner

Campus room terminology

  • Amphitheater - Outdoor stage
  • Congo - Congregational Church used as a meeting house
  • Cool House - Squash and Pool Building
  • Counting House - the business office, formerly the Music Cottage
  • Cowbarn Field - playing fields on Garden Street, former site of the school farm
  • Daisy - Daisy Cafe and Common Room
  • Hacker - Barbara Hacker Theater
  • Hamilton - English Literature, History Building
  • Nonie - Nona Evans Room
  • Olin - Sciences, Mathematics, Arts, and Computer Sciences Building
  • Timco - Timothy Cowles Archives Building

Notable alumnae

In fiction

  • In the television show Buffy the Vampire Slayer, when Buffy's mother thinks it would be best to send Buffy away to school, she picks up an application to Miss Porter's.
  • In the television show The Nanny, in Mr. Sheffield's office, Fran suggests Gracie attend the summer program at Miss Porter's.
  • In the musical Rent, one of the leads, Harvard-educated lesbian lawyer Joanne, attended and learned to tango with the French ambassador's daughter in her dorm room at Miss Porter's.
  • In the novel, Betrayed (A House of Night Novel) by P.C and Kristin Cast, Zoey finds Miss Porter's after researching different "private preparatory schools" to find examples of good student councils to model her own new Dark Daughters' council after.
  • In the novel The Debutantes by June Flaum Singer, the four main characters met at Miss Porter's.[1]
  • In the novel The Lace Reader by Brunonia Barry, a main character is sent to Miss Porter's.
  • The novel The New Girls (1979), by Beth Gutcheon, is set in a school called Miss Pratt's based on Miss Porter's.

References

External links

Portal icon Connecticut portal
Portal icon Schools portal

Coordinates: 41°43′20.737″N 72°49′45.894″W / 41.72242694°N 72.829415°W / 41.72242694; -72.829415


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  • Porter, Sarah — ▪ American educator born Aug. 16, 1813, Farmington, Conn., U.S. died Feb. 17, 1900, Farmington       American educator and founder of Miss Porter s School, still one of the leading preparatory schools for girls in the United States.       Porter… …   Universalium

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