Classical High School
Classical High School, founded in 1843, is a public magnet school in the Providence School District, in Providence, Rhode Island. It was originally an all-male school but has since become co-ed. Classical's motto is Certare, Petere, Reperire, Neque Cedere, a Latin translation of the famous phrase taken from Tennyson's poem "Ulysses", "To Strive, to Seek, to Find, and Not to Yield". It has been rated "High Performing and Sustaining" by its performance in 2005 on the New Standards Reference Exam, placing third in the state. The school also made Newsweek's America's Best High Schools of 2012 with a 99% graduation rate, 95% college bound, an average SAT score of 1578, and an average AP score of 2.8. Classical High School stands roughly at the intersection of the Federal Hill, West End, and Upper South Providence neighborhoods.
Mission statement
Classical High School, a demanding college preparatory examination school, serves a diverse community and provides its students with the means to achieve high standards in a rigorous learning environment. Classical encourages its students to pursue academic, artistic, athletic, and personal growth so they will experience success in colleges and universities, and will demonstrate excellence in leadership within the community.Architecture
Classical High School's current building was finished in 1970 and is one of few buildings in the area created in the Brutalist architectural style. The original school buildings had become outdated by the 1950s and after several fires and years of study, the city launched a competition for a new education complex in 1963. The winning design was by noted local architects Harkness & Geddes in collaboration with Walter Gropius, who founded The Architects Collaborative , the famous Boston architectural firm.William McKenzie Woodward, a well-known architectural historian and staff member of the Rhode Island Historical Preservation & Heritage Commission, does not agree aesthetically with the building, going so far as to write in his Guide to Providence Architecture, "It's no wonder Modernism has gotten such a bad reputation in Rhode Island because it smells very bad there." In 1986 McKenzie had however admitted in his survey for the Preservation Commission that "The new complex, the first of its kind in Providence built to serve a stable rather than expanding population, was well received as an ample and functional facility." Quoting John Ware Lincoln, then chairman of the Division of Design at Rhode Island School of Design as having noted: "The new Classical buildings are fine architecture, by the old standards, but they are also exemplary of the new concept of the architect as an environmental planner, working with social and civic sciences, demography, transportation engineering, building technologies, and, in this case, education philosophy."
The previous building, designed by Martin & Hall, was a yellow brick building with a peaked roof. It was considerably smaller and was bounded by Pond Street, which was consumed in the creation of the new campus. When the old building was razed the yellow bricks were sold to students and alumni.
Alumni
- Vernon Alden – Scholar, philanthropist, and 15th president of Ohio University
- John M. Barry – American author and historian
- Steve Cascione – Meteorologist
- Andy Coakley - Major League Baseball pitcher
- Joel Cohen – American musician specializing in early music repertoires
- Lauren Corrao – television executive
- Clark Coolidge – Poet and Jazz Musician
- Amy Diaz – co-host of "Social Women" & Miss Earth United States 2009
- John W. Dower – Pulitzer Prize winner
- Ronald Dworkin – Legal Philosopher & Professor at NYU
- C. M. Eddy, Jr. – Author known for his horror, mystery and supernatural short stories
- Jorge Elorza - Mayor of Providence
- Stanley Fish – Literary theorist and legal scholar
- Rudolph Fisher – pioneering Black radiologist and writer of the Harlem Renaissance
- Gordon D. Fox – American politician from Providence, Rhode Island and the Speaker of the Rhode Island House of Representatives
- Allan Fung – American politician and the first Asian-American mayor of Cranston, Rhode Island
- Robin Green – Emmy Award and Golden Globe Award-winning writer and producer; worked extensively on the HBO hit series The Sopranos and Northern Exposure; creator and executive producer for Blue Bloods.
- Gilbert V. Indeglia – Justice on the Rhode Island Supreme Court
- Frederick Irving – United States Ambassador to Iceland from 1972 to 1976, Assistant Secretary of State for Oceans and International Environmental and Scientific Affairs from 1976 to 1977, and United States Ambassador to Jamaica from 1977 to 1978.
- Michael Kang – Filmmaker
- Frank Licht – Former Governor of Rhode Island
- George Macready – Film actor
- Paul Mecurio – Emmy Award and Peabody Award winning comedy writer, producer, director and performer
- Joan Nathan – Award-winning author of cookbooks & Producer TV documentaries on the subject of Jewish cuisine
- Joe Nocera – American business journalist and author, business columnist for The New York Times
- Curly Oden – National Football League running back
- John O. Pastore – Former Governor of Rhode Island, United States Senator
- S. J. Perelman – American Humorist
- Anaridis Rodriguez - Former Weather Channel personality and current CBS Boston News anchor
- Melanie Sanford – American chemist, and Arthur F. Thurnau Professor of Chemistry at University of Michigan
- A. O. Scott – Chief movie critic for The New York Times
- Bruce M. Selya – senior federal judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit and chief judge of the United States Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court of Review
- Bruce Sundlun – Former Governor of Rhode Island
- Angel Taveras – First Latino Mayor of Providence
- Ralph Thomas Walker – Architect, President of the American Institute of Architects
- Richard Walton – American writer, teacher, and politician.
- Hannah Weiner – American poet