Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors.
Please consider supporting us by disabling your ad blocker.

Responsive image


Shady Side Academy

Shady Side Academy
Address
Map
423 Fox Chapel Road

Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
15238-2296

United States
Coordinates40°31′21″N 79°52′58″W / 40.5225°N 79.88278°W / 40.5225; -79.88278
Information
School typeIndependent boarding & day college-preparatory school
MottoLatin: Fide Semper Vincere}
(Faith Always Conquers)
Religious affiliation(s)Nonsectarian[1]
Established1883 (1883)
StatusOpen
CEEB code393901
NCES School ID01631942[1]
PresidentBartley P. Griffith Jr.[2]
ChairRobert Shannon Mullin[3]
GradesPK12
GenderCoeducational
Enrollment1,260[1] (2024-2025)
Student to teacher ratio7.5[1]
Hours in school day9.5[1]
Campuses4
Campus size200 acres (81 ha)
Color(s)   Old gold & navy
Athletics conferencePIAA, WPIAL
NicknameBulldogs[4]
AccreditationMSA, NAIS,[1] TABS[1]
NewspaperThe Shady Side Academy News
YearbookAcademian
Endowment$61.28 million[5]
Annual tuition$39,000 (day)
$66,500 (boarding)[6]
Revenue$61 million[5]
Nobel laureatesPhilip Showalter Hench
Websitewww.shadysideacademy.org

Shady Side Academy is an independent preparatory school Fox Chapel, Pennsylvania in Greater Pittsburgh. Founded in 1883 as an all-male night school in the Shadyside neighborhood of Pittsburgh, the academy now offers a secular coeducational PK–12 program on four campuses in the city and its suburbs, including a boarding program in the Croft and Morewood Houses of its Senior School Campus.[7]

Formed to provide for the education of the sons of newly moneyed industrialists of Pittsburgh's East End,[8] the academy counts the Frick and Mellon families among its early patrons.[9][10] In 1922 the academy expanded to its sprawling Georgian Senior School campus in the then-countryside of Fox Chapel under the influence of the Country Day School movement.[11] The academy merged with the Arnold School in 1940 to form its Junior School campus[12] and added its stone Tudor manor-style Middle School campus in 1958,[13] emerging in its current three-school system. The academy admitted its first female students in 1973.[14]

Shady Side Academy enrolls approximately one thousand students annually and is a member of the National Association of Independent Schools and the Association of Boarding Schools. The school is a member of the Chewonki Foundation's Maine Coast Semester at Chewonki in Wiscasset, Maine, CITYterm at the Masters' School, and the High Mountain Institute's HMI Semester in Leadville, Colorado, and sends a significant number of students to both programs annually.[15]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g "Search for Private Schools – School Detail for Shady Side Academy". National Center for Education Statistics. Institute of Education Sciences. Retrieved February 27, 2022.
  2. ^ "Welcome From the President". Academy Leadership. Shady Side Academy. Retrieved February 28, 2022.
  3. ^ "Officers of the Board". Board of Trustees. Shady Side Academy. Retrieved February 28, 2022.
  4. ^ "Mascot Search". Athletics. Shady Side Academy. Retrieved April 25, 2021.
  5. ^ a b "Form 990" (PDF). Tax Exempt Organization Search. Internal Revenue Service. 2019.
  6. ^ "2024–2025 Tuition & Fees". Affording SSA. Shady Side Academy. Retrieved October 14, 2024.
  7. ^ Silver, Jonathan L. (2004). Approaching the Pinnacle of Privilege: The History of Shady Side Academy, 1883-Present (Ph.D.). Carnegie Mellon University. p. 2.
  8. ^ David Cannadine, Mellon: An American Life (New York: Random House, 2008), 105.
  9. ^ Quentin R. Skrabec, Henry Clay Frick: the Life of the Perfect Capitalist (Jefferson, NC: McFarland, 2010), 154.
  10. ^ David Cannadine, Mellon: An American Life (New York: Random House, 2008), 339.
  11. ^ “Shadyside Academy Cornerstone Laid,” The Pittsburgh Press, May 3, 1922.
  12. ^ “Principals in School Merger,” The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, January 31, 1940.
  13. ^ "History". Retrieved December 25, 2011.
  14. ^ Jennifer Bails, "A Legacy of Learning: Shady Side Academy celebrates 125 Years of Academic Excellence," Shady Side Academy Magazine, Winter 2008-2009, 4.
  15. ^ "Sending Schools for Maine Coast Semester". Chewonki Foundation. Retrieved May 9, 2007.

Previous Page Next Page








Responsive image

Responsive image