Gilman School | |
---|---|
Address | |
5407 Roland Avenue , | |
Information | |
Type | Private, All-boys, PK-12 (education) |
Motto | In Tuo Lumine Lumen (Latin: "In Thy light [we see] light") |
Established | c. 1897 |
Sister school | Bryn Mawr School Roland Park Country School |
Head of School | Henry Smyth |
Faculty | 177[1] |
Grades | PK-12 |
Gender | Boys |
Number of students | 1,035[3] |
Campus | Suburban, 57 acres[2] (.23 km²) |
Color(s) | Blue and Gray |
Song | “Gilman, O Gilman” |
Athletics conference | MIAA |
Mascot | Greyhound |
Newspaper | The Gilman News |
Yearbook | Cynosure |
Affiliations | AIMSMDDC |
Website | www.gilman.edu |
Gilman School /ˈɡɪlmən/ is an all-boys independent school located in the Roland Park neighborhood of Baltimore, Maryland. There are three school divisions: Lower School, grades pre-kindergarten through five; Middle School, grades six through eight; and Upper School, grades nine through twelve. Founded in 1897 as the Country School for Boys, it was the first country day school in the US.[4] It is named for Daniel Coit Gilman, the first president of Johns Hopkins University and an early supporter of efforts by Anne Galbraith Carey to form an all-boys day school.[5]
Gilman enrolls approximately 1,400 students, ranging from pre-kindergarten to 12th grade, under the instruction of 146 faculty members.[6] It is a member of the Association of Independent Maryland Schools[7] and the Maryland Interscholastic Athletic Association.[8]
Prominent graduates of Gilman include author Walter Lord, sportswriter Frank Deford, Arizona Governor Fife Symington, Maryland Governor Bob Ehrlich, US Senator Daniel Brewster, US Congressman John Sarbanes, and composer Christopher Rouse and Cyrus Jones.