Misplaced Pages

Miller School of Albemarle

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from The Miller School of Albemarle)
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Miller School of Albemarle" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (September 2024) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Co-ed day & boarding school in Charlottesville, Virginia, USA
Miller School of Albemarle
Address
1000 Samuel Miller Loop
Charlottesville, Virginia 22903
USA
Coordinates38°00′21″N 78°42′05″W / 38.0059°N 78.7013°W / 38.0059; -78.7013
Information
School typeCo-ed Day & Boarding
MottoMind, Hands, and Heart
Founded1878
FounderSamuel Miller
Head of schoolJ. Michael Drude
Grades8-PG
Enrollment255
Average class size12
Color(s)Teal
AthleticsBaseball, basketball,Disc Golf, conditioning, cross country, equestrian, golf, tennis, soccer, volleyball, Road Cycling & Mountain Biking, Softball
Athletics conferenceBRAC
MascotMavericks (2008-present)
Red Devils (-2008)
AffiliationVAIS
Boarding30% of student body
Day students70% of student body
Co-educational ratioBoys: 52%
Girls: 48%
CurriculumCollege Preparatory
Websitehttp://www.millerschoolofalbemarle.org
Miller School of Albemarle
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
Virginia Landmarks Register
Area90 acres (36 ha)
Built1874
Built byAlbert M. Lybrook
ArchitectAnderson, D. Wiley
Architectural styleGothic, High Victorian Gothic
NRHP reference No.74002102
VLR No.002-0174
Significant dates
Added to NRHPFebruary 15, 1974
Designated VLRApril 17, 1973

Miller School of Albemarle is a coeducational day and boarding school for grades 8 to 12 in Charlottesville, Virginia. Founded in 1878, Miller School is one of the first coeducational boarding schools in America. The 1,100-acre campus includes 15 miles of mountain bike trails, a 12-acre lake, and a 40-acre working farm. 260 students from 15 states and 16 countries are currently enrolled as day and boarding students. Miller School is known for combining rigorous academics with practical hands-on experience, so that students gain know-how as well as knowledge.

History

Miller School was founded in 1878 with a bequest of $1.1 million from Samuel Miller, who grew up near the grounds where the school is now situated. His will provided for the majority of his estate to be used for the establishment of a boarding school for orphaned children, a school to be located near his birthplace in Albemarle County. By 1874, following Mr. Miller's 1869 death and the resolution of several legal disputes, architects and builders began designing and constructing The Miller Manual Labor School. This work culminated in August, 1878, with a grand opening and dedication of the central portion of "Old Main", an impressive structure of Victorian architecture, around which much of Miller School life still revolves. "Old Main" is now on the Virginia Historic Landmarks Registry. The main building was designed by architect Albert Lybrock.

Timeline

  • 1878: The first curriculum was designed; students received instruction in the classics as well agriculture and such trades as carpentry and metal work.
  • 1882: The first baseball team won its initial game, a 55-0 victory over Fishburne Military School.
  • 1883: Thomas Edison's company designed and supervised the installation of Miller School's first electric power plant, two Edison Style "K" dynamos and 250 incandescent light bulbs.
  • 1884: Girls board at the school.
KidsMillerS
  • 1927: With mounting operational expenses and little fund-raising, Miller School began to cut its programs; the girls program was the first to go, not returning until the early 1990s.
  • 1939: Began to phase out its farming operations and, instead, leased the land to generate income.
  • 1948: Won the annual interschool boxing championship.
  • 1950: Began to charge tuition to supplement its trust funds, which no longer generate sufficient yearly revenues to support the school.
  • 1951: As military schools reach new heights of popularity in post-World War II America, Miller School added military programs
  • 1964: 224 boarding boys were enrolled at Miller School, many of them 5th and 6th graders
  • 1967: School was racially integrated.
  • 1984: Miller became a founding member of the Virginia Association of Independent Schools and charted a course toward a college preparatory curriculum.
  • 1992: The school accepted boy and girl day students.
  • 1994: A girls boarding program began; the military program was de-emphasized (and eventually eliminated).
  • 1999: New state legislation was passed to give Miller School more flexibility and authority in the appointment of members of its own board of trustees.
  • 2001: A student was awarded the first-ever Emily Couric Award for Leadership, given annually to a young woman in central Virginia who demonstrated by her good deeds the high ideals, work ethic, and leadership qualities of the late State Sen. Emily Couric
  • 2003: A Point Guard was named VIS Division II Player of the Year.
  • 2004: The school adopted a Strategic Plan, expanded its Board of Trustees, and recommitted to a college preparatory curriculum, and set up a Development Office.
Women at Miller School in 1891
  • 2006: A Point Guard was named VIS Division II Player of the Year. The boys varsity baseball team won its first state championship title.
  • 2007: The largest senior class in Miller School's history was established with 42 students. The school's historian, Peggy Flannagan, died at 101 years old. A Power Forward was named VIS Division II Player of the Year.
  • 2008: School changed its colors from maroon and gray to teal. The mascot was no longer the Red Devil; Miller School's athletic teams compete as the Mavericks. A Power Forward was named VIS Division II Player of the Year.
  • 2009: The boys varsity basketball team won its first state championship title.
  • 2010: The endurance cycling team is started.
  • 2010: The girls varsity basketball team won its first state championship title.
  • 2011: The girls basketball team wins back to back state championships.
  • 2014: The girls varsity basketball team again wins state championship title.
  • 2015: The girls basketball team again wins back to back state championships.
  • 2016: The girls basketball team wins the state championships.
  • 2017: The girls basketball team wins the state championships, four in a row!
  • 2017: J. Michael Drude takes over as Head of School.
  • 2017: The boys baseball team wins the VIC championship and VISAA State Championship.
  • 2018: The boys basketball team wins the VIC Championship and the VISAA Division II State Championship. The girls basketball team wins the BRC State Championship. 5th title in a row. Boys basketball forward wins VISAA All State Player of the Year. Girls basketball guard wins VISAA All State Player of the Year. Baseball team wins VISAA State Championship.
  • 2019: Baseball team wins VISAA State Championship.
  • 2020: Sustainable Agriculture Program brings farming and agricultural learning back to Miller School.
  • 2020: Cycling team athlete wins Junior Men's 15-16 USA Cycling National Championship Road Race.
  • 2023: Cycling team athlete wins Junior Women's 15-16 USA Cycling National Championship Cross-Country Mountain Bike Race.
  • 2024: The boys basketball team wins BRAC and VISAA Division II State Championship.

Historic buildings

The school includes architecture designed by D. Wiley Anderson. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974. The listing includes three contributing buildings on 90 acres (36 ha).

Honor Code

The Honor Code at Miller School is "I will not lie, steal, or cheat, nor will I tolerate any violation of the honor code by any other student."

The Honor Code is administered in large part by an Honor Committee of student and faculty members. The Honor Committee which conducts hearings with respect to allegations of Honor Code violations. These hearings are conducted in private.

Old Main in the spring.

AP courses

English Literature, English Language, U.S. History, Environmental Science, United States Government, Calculus AB, Calculus BC, French Literature, Economics, European History, Chemistry, Biology, Physics I, Physics II

Elective offerings

Visual Arts, Photography, Engineering, Land Management, Computer Programming, Performance Arts, Woodworking, Music, Sustainable Agriculture, and Drama

Signature Offerings

Miller School offers courses in Sustainable Agriculture, Applied Engineering, Design/Build, and Land Management. In January, students participate in the Winter Week of Wisdom and Wonder that includes non-traditional academic and hands-on courses. The Endurance Cycling Team is a 3-season athletic offering that includes road cycling, mountain biking, cyclocross, and enduro mountain biking as well as trail design and building.

Extracurricular programs

The school has a National Honor Society Chapter. Membership in the National Honor Society is based on a combination of factors, including overall GPA, leadership within the school community and service to the wider community. Students who are inducted into the NHS serve as peer tutors during their time at Miller. In addition, the Society performs some sort of community service each year, whether by volunteering with a local organization or raising money to support a local charity. In 2018, Miller School also became home to a chapter of the Spanish Honor Society (Sociedad Honoraria Hispánica), sponsored by the American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese (AATSP).

"The Hill" is the nickname that students call the campus.

"The Bell Tower" is the name of the school magazine.

Student government

Miller School has a student government which consists of a student body President, Vice President, Secretary, and Treasurer. Each student grade has two class representatives which represent their classes during student government meetings. The student government works with the school's administration to represent the views of the students in decisions made which affect the student body. The student government works with the school's administration and board of directors to raise money and orchestrate student activities such as dances and balls with other boarding and day schools, and student requested dress down days, which are days where the school's dress code does not apply.

In popular culture

  • Used for the exterior and interior scenes of the boarding school attended by the characters in the film Toy Soldiers
  • Used for the exterior and interior scenes of the boarding school attended by the characters in the film Major Payne
  • Used for the opening sequence of the boarding school attended by the characters in the film Morgan Stewart's Coming Home
  • Used for the opening credits fly-over sequence in the film Cry Wolf
  • Used for exterior scenes for the short film I Have Love in Me

References

  1. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  2. "Virginia Landmarks Register". Virginia Department of Historic Resources. Retrieved 2013-05-12.
  3. "ABOUT". Miller School of Albemarle. Retrieved 2024-11-24.
  4. Dreier, Fred (2018-08-31). "High school MTB leagues rebuild U.S. cycling's base". Velo. Retrieved 2024-11-24.
  5. Progress, EMILY HEMPHILL The Daily (2024-04-16). "Miller School's expansion plans could see the boarding school nearly double its student body". The Daily Progress. Retrieved 2024-11-24.
  6. "ACADEMICS". Miller School of Albemarle. 2024-11-20. Retrieved 2024-11-24.
  7. Morson's Row April 2013 ArchitectureRichmond
  8. "Haidet, Schmutte and Scuriatti Victorious on Day Two of…". USA Cycling. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
  9. "I HAVE LOVE IN ME — Anne DeMelo — Director". Anne DeMelo — Director. Retrieved 2024-03-06.

External links

U.S. National Register of Historic Places in Virginia
Lists
by county


Lists
by city
Other lists
Education in Albemarle County, Virginia
Albemarle County Public Schools
Public high schools
Charter schools
Independent schools
Secular private schools
Alternative schools
Tertiary
Colleges and universities
This list is incomplete.
The University of Virginia operates facilities in both unincorporated Albemarle County and the independent city of Charlottesville.
Categories: