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School Type: Co-Ed
Boarding Grades: 9-12
Enrollment: 435
Annual Boarding Tuition: $42,000
Annual Day Tuition: N/A
Student to Teacher Ratio: 6:1
School Focus: College Prep
Average Class Size: 12
% Students on Financial Aid: 30%
Endowment Size: $135 Million
Accommodates ADHD Students: No
School Supports LD: No
School Supports ESL: No
Year Founded: 1839
Episcopal High School

Episcopal High School Co-Ed Boarding School Information:
FHS at A Glance!
Founded on a tradition of honor and the pursuit of self-discovery, Episcopal High School engages students in a challenging college preparatory education.
The School fosters empathy and responsibility for self and others through a commitment to spiritual inquiry and growth in a fully residential community. Students are encouraged to think creatively, work collaboratively, develop individual passions, and celebrate the talents of others.
Sharing diverse life experiences, ideas, and values, students learn humility, resilience, and mutual respect. Through access to the educational and cultural resources of the nation's capital, students are inspired to understand and embrace a changing world. Together, faculty and students take initiative as informed citizens and environmental stewards. Episcopal strives to prepare young people to become discerning individuals with the intellectual and moral courage to lead principled lives of leadership and service to others.
History
Episcopal High School was founded in 1839, on an 80-acre tract of land just west of the colonial port of Alexandria, Virginia. School doors opened with 35 boys under the leadership of The Rev. William N. Pendleton and three assistant heads.
Just one year later, Episcopal's student body tripled in size to accommodate more than 100 boys, and continued to grow until the Civil War. Immediately following the Federal occupation of Alexandria in 1861, the School was closed. Some 500 students served as soldiers in the war. For the next five years, the EHS buildings were part of a large hospital for Federal troops. The School reopened in 1866. Under the direction of Launcelot Minor Blackford (Principal, 1870-1913), the School initiated a modern academic curriculum and pioneered interscholastic team sports in the South, including football, baseball, and track. Recognizing the need to improve its facilities, the School also undertook an aggressive building program that formed the foundation for the present-day campus.
During the same time, Episcopal instituted it Honor Code, one of the oldest among secondary schools. A committee of students and faculty members promotes understanding of the code and handles violations. The Honor Code has served as a foundation of the EHS community since its inception.
In 1991, Episcopal began a transition to coeducation by enrolling its first 48 girls. In 1993, the first coeducational class graduated. Today, the School has an enrollment of 425 students, 45 percent of whom are girls. Episcopal has many accomplished alumni among its ranks, including Rhodes Scholars, Pulitzer Prize winners, Wall Street financiers, college presidents, actors, musicians, clergymen, and statesmen, including congressmen, governors, and ambassadors.

