Shipley's History
Shipley was founded in 1894 by three sisters, Hannah, Elizabeth, and Katharine Shipley, to prepare students for Bryn Mawr College. The Shipleys, strong-minded and well-educated Quaker ladies, believed firmly in what was then a controversial idea—education for women. Their establishment was to be far more than a finishing school. In the fall of 1894, when the School opened with six students and nine faculty members, a philosophy of education was established that would guide the School for over a hundred years, up to the present time.
In their first catalogue, the Shipley sisters stated that it would “be their aim to fit [the student] to enter college with a mind trained to habits of scientific study and a character qualified, in as far as possible, to receive the highest culture.” That mission, rephrased for successive generations, has remained. We have always taught critical thinking. the School was and is concerned with what we now call “the whole child.” Both mind and character are important.
By 1950 the School was enrolling some 340 students, one third of whom were in Pre-School through Grade Seven. Half of the Upper School students were boarders from all over the country, as well as Europe, Asia, and Latin America. Shipley graduates were going to
colleges beyond Bryn Mawr—to the other traditional women’s colleges as well as coeducational schools.
Over the years, the School added land, buildings, playing fields, science labs, gymnasiums, and a theater. But the aims expressed in the 1950 catalogue had not changed much since 1894: “Each girls’ development as a useful, interesting, happy, and increasingly mature person is considered of first importance. Intellectual curiosity and a sense of individual responsibility are encouraged in every way.”
In the 1970s and ’80s Shipley underwent two dramatic changes. It started accepting boys and it closed the boarding department. The last boarding students graduated in 1982 and by 1984 the School was fully coeducational, with equal numbers of boys and girls. Starting in the 1990s, and increasingly since then, we have augmented our traditional teaching methods and facilities with growing technological expertise and equipment of which the three Shipley sisters could never have dreamed.
For over a hundred years Shipley and its mission have had the flexibility to keep up with changes unforeseen in 1894. We have always known that our students would need to be equipped to deal with constant challenges and change. It has been and continues to be our mandate to prepare them for their future.
The Shipley School Song
Music: “Annie Lisle,” William H. Goodyear
From afar as strangers came we
With our aims of youth.
Love and friendship do we owe thee;
Friends we are in truth.
Hail our colors! Speed them onward!
Shipley, hail to thee!
Green for hope we always cherish,
Blue for loyalty.
Worthy standards hast thou brought us;
Steadfast will we be.
Truth and honor hast thou taught us;
Thanks we give to thee.
Hail our colors! Speed them onward!
Shipley, hail to thee!
Green for hope we always cherish,
Blue for loyalty.
Chronology
| October 3, 1894 |
Hannah, Elizabeth, and Katharine Shipley take their first pupil to prepare her for Bryn Mawr College entrance examinations. The School begins with six students and nine faculty. |
| 1895 |
Main School Building is purchased. |
| 1916 |
Alice Howland and Eleanor Brownell purchase The Shipley School and become co-heads. |
| 1932 |
Shipley is incorporated as a not-for-profit institution and the first Board of Trustees purchases the School, its buildings and property from the "Hownells." |
| 1937 |
Townsend House is purchased. |
| 1940 |
Brownell House is purchased. |
| 1942 |
Mildred and J. Russell Lynes become heads of Shipley. |
| 1943 |
Shipley Alumnae Association is founded. |
| 1944 |
Margaret Bailey Speer becomes head of Shipley. |
| |
Gladwyne Farm and Athletic Fields are deeded to the School by the "Hownells." |
| 1945 |
Howland House is purchased. |
| |
Augusta Wagner comes to Shipley as Associate Headmistress. |
| 1948 |
Alumnae Office opens. |
| 1952 |
Addition to the Main School Building is completed. |
| 1956 |
Beechwood House is purchased for grades 1-3. |
| 1959 |
Wagner House and 919 Montgomery Avenue are purchased. |
| 1961 |
841 Montgomery Avenue, the Head of School's house, is purchased. |
| 1964 |
Middle House is dedicated for grades 4-7. |
| 1965 |
Isota Tucker Epes '36 becomes head of Shipley. |
| |
Margaret Bailey Speer Library and Classroom Wing are dedicated. |
| 1966 |
Fuller property is purchased. |
| |
New School House is dedicated. |
| 1967 |
Shipley School Endowment Fund is established with $9,000. |
| 1972 |
First boys are admitted to Shipley, in grades K-3. First males graduate from Shipley (four one-year seniors from Episcopal). Nancy E. Lauber becomes head. |
| 1977 |
Yarnall Gymnasium is dedicated. |
| 1978 |
Riely Theatre is dedicated. |
| 1979 |
Frederic L Chase III assumes headship. |
| 1980-1981 |
Foulkes property is purchased and playing fields are constructed. |
| 1981 |
Squash courts are dedicated. |
| 1982 |
Last boarding student graduates from Shipley. |
| 1985 |
Gary R. Gruber becomes Head of School. |
| 1987 |
Founders' Chair, Shipley's first endowed teaching chair, is established. |
| 1992 |
Steven S. Piltch becomes Head of School. |
| |
Yarnall Gymnasium is rededicated in memory of Hester Yarnall. |
| 1993 |
West Middle School opens for grades 6-8. |
| 1993-1994 |
Shipley's year-long Centennial celebration. |
| 1995 |
Snyder Science Center and Upper School renovations completed. |
| 1997 |
Margaret Bailey Speer Distinguished Teachers Fund established in memory of Miss Speer. |
| 1998 |
Avery Silverman Dining Hall addition and Riely Theatre renovation completed. |
| |
Elizabeth Gwinn Field at the Farm dedicated. |
| 2002 |
20 Million Dollar Capital Campaign Completed |
| |
Beechwood House Opening |
| |
Lower School Additions and Renovations Completed |
| 2006-2007 |
Turf fields installed at the Farm and the Lower Campus |