UMS-Wright Preparatory School

Last updated

UMS-Wright Preparatory School
UMS-Wright Preparatory School logo.jpg
Address
65 Mobile St N, Mobile, AL 36607

Mobile
,
36607

United States
Information
Former nameUniversity Military School
School type Private College Preparatory
Motto"For the UMS-Wright Family to educate all students to their highest potential in mind, body, and spirit, "and to produce in each student character of the highest possible order."
Established1893
FounderDr. Julius T Wright
PresidentDr. Tony Havard
DeanKeith Rice
PrincipalDoug Barber (Upper School), Wes Lathan (Middle School), Dr. Patricia Boehm (Lower School)
HeadmasterDoug Barber
Faculty144
GradesK-3 – Twelfth Grade
GenderCo-educational
Enrollment1,150
Student to teacher ratio8:1
LanguageEnglish
Hours in school day8
Campus size32 acres
Color(s)Crimson and Grey Tupcolor.svg
SongUMS-Wright Alma Mater
Athletics conferenceAlabama 4A
SportsYes
Mascot Bulldog
Team nameUMS-Wright Bulldogs
Rival St. Paul's Episcopal School
Accreditation Southern Association of Colleges and Schools
Test average ACT: 30 SAT: 1360
PublicationThe Mind's Eye
NewspaperThe Crimson and Grey
YearbookThe Cadet
Annual tuition
  • K3: $6,645
  • K4 and K5: $7,745
  • Grades 1–2: $10,105
  • Grades 3–4: $10,875
  • Grades 5–6: $11,245
  • Grades 7–8: $12,255
  • Grades 9–12: $12,745
Website https://www.ums-wright.org/

UMS-Wright is an independent co-educational preschool in Mobile, Alabama. The school was founded in 1893 as University Military School, and in 1988 it combined with Julius T Wright School for Girls (founded 1956) to form UMS-Wright Preparatory School.

Contents

History

University Military School

1905 UMS Football Team 1905-Football-Team.jpg
1905 UMS Football Team

UMS-Wright Preparatory opened as University Military School on October 2, 1893, at 559 Conti Street. The school's founder and first headmaster was Dr. Julius T. Wright (1871–1931). The school’s opening day coincided with the 1893 Cheniere Caminada hurricane. The school had a single teacher and twenty-five pupils at a tuition of $8 a month. Dr. Wright served as the headmaster of the school until his death in 1931. William Pape took over after Dr. Wright. Pape died in 1943 and his family turned control of the school over to a nonprofit corporation, the UMS Alumni and Parents Association, Inc. UMS moved the school to its current location on North Mobile Street in 1956 to accommodate the growing number of students. [1]

Girls Preparatory School

Thirty years after the opening of University Military School (an all male school) Julius T Wright opened Girls Preparatory School in 1923 to provide a similar education to the young women of the Mobile community. It only lasted eight years as it closed after the death of Dr. Wright in 1931.

Julius T. Wright School for Girls

Julius T. Wright School for Girls opened in 1956 at the same location as Girls Preparatory School at 1315 Dauphin Street, which had been newly renovated. It came after a long campaign by alumni of the original Girls Preparatory School to have a female equivalent to University Military School. The school moved to 1400 S University Blvd in 1972. It remained there until its merger with University Military School in 1988.

UMS-Wright Preparatory School

In 1988, University Military School and Julius T Wright School for Girls followed the trend of many other single-gender schools around the country and combined to form the co-educational UMS-Wright Preparatory School. Dr. Tony Havard, a member of the UMS English faculty, was named the headmaster and is now the current president of the school.

Description

Structure

The school has a three-level structure: the Lower School (K-3 through 4th grade), the Middle school (5th grade through 8th grade), and the Upper School (9th grade through 12th grade). [2]

The UMS-Wright Arts Building that is used for Fine Art, Drama, Chorus, and Band Classes. Arts building, UMS-Wright Preparatory School, Mobile, Alabama (February 2015).jpg
The UMS-Wright Arts Building that is used for Fine Art, Drama, Chorus, and Band Classes.

Campus

Located on Campus are five Lower School buildings, two middle school buildings, and one high school building. All three have separate offices and principals. The campus also houses two full-size gymnasiums, a weight training facility, and an athletic training facility. The football stadium, Cooper Stadium, is surrounded by a four-hundred meter track. Also located on Campus are two multi-purpose fields, a twenty-five-meter swimming pool, a baseball field, and a softball field.

Athletics

UMS-Wright offers thirteen team sports for students from lower school to high school. The school competes in the AHSAA division 4A. The Sports offered include cross country, football, soccer, tennis, swimming and diving, track and field, softball, baseball, bass fishing, and bowling. [3]

UMS-Wright also has a long-standing athletic rivalry with St. Paul's Episcopal School, another local private high school that is just 2.2 miles away down Old Shell Road. In football and track and field, the two teams meet every year in the "Battle of Old Shell Road."

The Student Section of a Home UMS-Wright Football Game. Football Game at UMS.jpg
The Student Section of a Home UMS-Wright Football Game.

State titles

UMS-Wright has 156 total state championship titles: [ citation needed ]

Academics

UMS Wright was ranked second out of ninety-seven schools in Niche.com "Best Private K-12 Schools in Alabama" ranking. The average ACT score is 30 and the average SAT score in 1360. 99% of graduating seniors attend a four-year college or university, with the 3 most popular being the University of Alabama, Auburn University, and the University of South Alabama. The school currently has 1,150 students enrolled with a student-teacher ratio of 8:1. [4]

All UMS-Wright Students Are Given Apple Macbook Air Laptops to complete their coursework; as part of the Pettie grant. UMS Laptop.jpg
All UMS-Wright Students Are Given Apple Macbook Air Laptops to complete their coursework; as part of the Pettie grant.

Clubs

Honor Societies

Honor Council

The Honor Council is composed of student representatives in grades 9–12 who are elected to promote honesty and integrity.

Notable alumni

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References

  1. "UMS-Wright Preparatory School". www.ums-wright.org. Retrieved February 8, 2019.
  2. "UMS-Wright Preparatory School". www.ums-wright.org. Retrieved February 8, 2019.
  3. "UMS-Wright Preparatory School". www.ums-wright.org. Retrieved February 8, 2019.
  4. "Explore UMS-Wright Preparatory School". Niche. Retrieved February 8, 2019.
  5. Blount, Serna (September 17, 2020). "Winston Groom". Encyclopedia of Alabama.
  6. "Biographical Directory of the U.S. Congress - Retro Member details". bioguideretro.congress.gov. Archived from the original on August 5, 2020.
  7. Sawyer, Jessica (October 20, 2013). "From privilege to servant: Sandy Stimpson eager to bring lifetime of experience to new role as Mobile mayor". al.com. Retrieved November 12, 2020.
  8. Thomas, Ben (January 23, 2014). "Gus Malzahn helps UMS-Wright celebrate 'Jay Prosch Day' (photos, video)". al.com. Retrieved November 12, 2020.
  9. Hicks, Tommy (July 24, 2012). "Current Alabama and former UMS-Wright golfer Bobby Wyatt lighting it up in summer tournaments". al.com. Retrieved November 12, 2020.
  10. "Maddux Bruns - Varsity Baseball". UMS-Wright Preparatory School.