- Booth School
Infobox Private School
background = #f0f6fa (standard color)
border = #ccd2d9 (standard color)
name = Booth School
motto =
established = 1938 - 1976
type = Private
religion = none
head_name = Headmistress
head = Phoebe Booth
city = Rosemont
state =Pennsylvania
country = USA
coordinates =
campus =Suburban
enrollment = 300+ at peak
faculty =
class =
ratio =
year =
patron =
SAT =
ACT =
athletics =
colors = blue and white
mascot =
conference =
homepage =
ceeb =The Booth School or "The Booth School: A Country School for Boys and Girls" was a private or
independent school in the Philadelphia Main Line suburbs from 1938 to 1976. The 27 acre campus it occupied for most of its existence was located at the intersection of Ithan Avenue and Clyde Road inRosemont, Pennsylvania , and is now the site ofHill Top Preparatory School .History
Timeline
The school was founded as The Devon School in 1938 by Phoebe Booth (Mrs. John Wesley Booth, nee Barsby). A graduate of
West Chester University of Pennsylvania (then West Chester Normal School), the former one-room schoolteacher gathered several neighbors to serve as teachers. They started the facility in the Booth residence inDevon, Pennsylvania , with about 20 students. In 1944, the Booths moved the school to a larger location in Rosemont (its final location) and changed its name to The Booth School.Mrs. Booth served as the school's only headmistress. Innovative in educational issues (such as coeducation and teaching of reading through phonics) and conservative in outlook, Mrs. Booth was both admired and criticized by her students. Associate headmistress Phoebe Booth Dechert (Mrs. Peter Dechert), Mrs. Booth's Harvard-educated daughter, assisted in administration. Mrs. Dechert also taught English and other subjects, directed student plays, and later spearheaded the school's development from a respected elementary school to a full 12-year curriculum in 1961, making it
K-12 and over 300 strong at its peak.Booth also had a summer school and a summer camp called "Hurricane Hill" on its campus.
The Booth School closed in 1976. Some of the faculty participated in the founding of the
Woodlynde School of Strafford, at about the same time Booth closed.Facilities
The main building on the 28 acre campus was a Georgian mansion originally built for the Snowdon family in 1917. An additional single-story building was build in 1961 for the Upper (high) school classes. In the early 1970s a small gymnasium was constructed to permit physical education during the winter months.
Afterword
Mrs. Booth died in April 1985 at the age of 89. Mrs. Dechert and her family moved to Santa Fe, New Mexico, in 1968, where she worked in theater and conservation and died on October 9, 2005.
It is not known whether any school records are still in existence. A group of alumni has formed to facilitate contact and networking with former school members (currently using a Yahoogroup).
A number of Booth School yearbooks, from 1962-1967, are held at the Sanderson Museum of Chadds Ford, PA. (
Christian C. Sanderson , a local historian and fiddler, taught square-dancing at the school for a number of years.)Description
Found within Booth School promotional materials are the following precepts:
*"Good is not good enough at The Booth School. Excellence is required."
*"The Booth School believes in a thorough foundation in the 3Rs, necessitating a great deal of drill and hard work."
*"The dining room is a gracious and pleasant place where good manners is the fashion. Food idiosyncrasies soon disappear in this atmosphere."
*"There is no time for unmotivated pursuits."
*"We believe in self-expression under discipline and guidance."Alma Mater
The school song "The Alma Mater" (words by Sally Macon and Polly Fox from a Netherlands Folk Song):
"The walls and the ivy "Which now surround us, "Will always be there "When we're far away "The wisdom we've gained "The strength we have obtained "Will keep our days at Booth "In our hearts for alway. "We offer now to you "Our trust and devotion "Dear source of our learning "And home of true friends "Through knowledge we'll conquer "The life that we're beginning "And keep the memory "Of Booth School ever true."
Anecdotes
*When the gym was finally constructed and a basketball game was arranged to christen it, rumor had it that Mrs. Booth was so worried about the health of an alumni basketball team that she ordered 5-minute quarters and oxygen on their bench.
*The first (1961) and last (1976) graduating classes each consisted of 2 people.Notable attendees
*
John de Lancie , '67, actor--Star Trek 's "Q"
*Marty Gwinn Townsend , ex-'68, singer, songwriter (Coyote Sisters ), breeder of horses
*Geoffrey Budd Landis , '70, Southwestern painter
*Tom Pakradooni , '71, int'l powerboat racer (Rolling Thunder)
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