Wednesday, March 5, 2014

College Prep: The Preppiest Colleges in America, 2014.

If you search the internet for a list of the preppiest colleges in America, you'll mind many, many options.  Of the hundreds of thousands of colleges and universities in this country, the preppiest ones are generally found in the North and South.  Books such as The Official Preppy Handbook (our bible) have ranked the preppiest colleges in a specific, but we won't be doing that.  We will, however, provide you with a list of what are considered to be the preppiest colleges in American as of this year, 2014.
If you don't see your school and think it should be included, please comment with a reason as to why.

Hampden-Sydney College, VA
The Official Preppy Handbook dubbed Hampden-Sydney the peppiest college in the country, as did the Huffington Post.  It has been referred to as the "finishing school of southern gentlemen" and it is a general belief that single sex schools are always preppier than any co-ed university.  It should also be noted that HS is one of only four all male colleges remaining in the United States.  William Henry Harrison, our country's 9th president was a member of the class of 1791. HS students are known for sporting belts with their school's notable crest and it is said that they refer to themselves as "gentlemen."  This school has even gone so far as to publish their own etiquette guide titled From Manor Born to Manners Bred, which has even been updated for the digital media age.  If that doesn't say preppy, than I don't know what does.

Trinity College, CT
I've called the east coast the "bastion of preppy things," so of course it has many preppy colleges, but this one really does take the cake.  A small, private liberal arts school nestled in the heart of New England, it seems to have everything a prep school grad could want for.  The Official Preppy Handbook listed Trinity as one of the top 20 preppy colleges in America. True Prep also paid homage to this school, featuring a piece on a Trinity alumnus and his perfect wardrobe.  Trinity was all male until 1969 and has graduated many fine men and women, including Edward Albee and Tucker Carlson, both of whom are featured on our "Prepdom Hall of Fame."  Preppy Handbook and True Prep author Lisa Birnbach referred to Trinity as the "preppiest college in New England" which is definitely saying something.  Looking at that photo, it's easy to see why so many students choose to go to college in New England.  East coast represent!

Princeton University - NJ
Of course, no list of preppy school's would be complete without at least one representative from the Ivy League.  In his book The Making of Princeton University: From Woodrow Wilson to the Present, author James Axtell referred to the boat shoe (i,e the Sperry Top-Sider, the quintessential shoe of the New England prep school student) as a "notable symbol of Princeton."
If you didn't gather this from the book title, former U.S. president Woodrow Wilson was a Princeton alum.  A columnist for the Daily Princetonian said of Princeton "The manliest men wore the most pink and the girliest girls swooned at their sides."   New Jersey is also home to the elite Lawrenceville School, one of the most prestigious prep schools in the country, which has been described as "looking and acting like a mini Princeton."  It's also worth mentioning that the town of Princeton is home to stores such as J. McLaughlin, Palm Place, Ralph Lauren, J. Crew and many more, all of which are ideal for updating a preppy wardrobe.

University of Virginia, VA
Public and state schools don't tend to be preppy, but this flagship state university is certainly an exception.  When Thomas Jefferson couldn't get his alma mater, The College of William and Mary declared the official university of Virginia, he started his own and thus UVA was born.  It is one of the most selective public universities in the country and certainly the preppiest.  It's greek system is well known and while most colleges have "Greek Row" or something similar for their greek houses, UVA has Rugby Road.  The phrase "Guys in ties, girls in pearls," is a well known mantra around campus, but perhaps the most impressive preppy factor is this; At the nearby College of William and Mary, they have "dress like a UVA day" where all the students dress as preppy as they can, typically sporting pink and greek clothes with popped collars.  It really is impressive when a state school can manage to be more preppy than a prestigious private one.



Connecticut College, CT
You've read about Trinity College above, now meet their sister school, Connecticut College.  Located near the ocean in scenic, upscale Trinity went co-ed. The Official Preppy Handbook described it as being filled with students who were didn't get into Wesleyan or Brown so they retaliated by getting even preppier.  Conn has also been mentioned on "Mad Men" as well as in John Updike's novel "The Witches of Eastwick." Located in the very upscale New London Connecticut, this small, private school has been nicknamed "Abercrombie U."  While we don't consider Abercrombie to be a preppy brand, the message is clear.  Conn is known for it's teams excelling in sports such as tennis, field hockey, squash and sailing, all the preppiest sports, as well as for their equestrian program.  Founded in 1911 as an all woman's school, Conn remained single sex until 1969, the same year that


Boston College, MA
Dubbed the "capitol of New England," Boston is known for many things.  Since one of these things is old money, it makes sense that the preppy culture would be strong there, particularly in the upscale neighborhood of Chestnut Hill, where BC is located.  The students at this historic private college have been described as looking like a "walking J. Crew catalogue" which would make perfect sense, given the great clothing shops that line the streets of Boston.  BC upperclassmen joke that freshmen return from winter break while an entirely new wardrobe that "conforms more to the BC look."  Although we don't know this for sure, it is also said that whenever BC faceed off against BU (Boston University) in hockey, the BC student body would chant "safety school" repeatedly.  


St. Lawrence University, NY
This isolated NY liberal art school was ranked number 8 on the list of preppiest colleges by The Official Preppy Handbook.  Known for it's constantly stellar teams in soccer, lacrosse, and most all hockey, St. Lawrence has been described as a "boarding school on steroids." Greek life is popular at SLU.  So are ski weekends, as the campus isn't far from some great slopes in both Vermont and Canada.  As the Preppy Handbook stated "Everyone has a Norwegian sweater and a brother who made the olympic trials."  St. Lawrence wasn't named in the Huffington Post's list of Top Ten Preppiest Colleges, but many thought that it should have been.  When I asked a current SLU student I know if his school was preppy he replied "Yes, it really is.  You see a lot of pastels and popped collars."


College of the Holy Cross, MA
This college is definitely the sleeper as far as preppy schools go.  Both The Official Preppy Handbook and The Huffington Post failed to list it as one of the preppiest schools and we're still trying to figure out why.
Holy Cross is very much the Trinity College of Massachusetts, an insular private college located in a not-so-nice city (in their case, Worcester), but home to many beautiful, ivy covered buildings and white-bred, preppy students who are rumored to rarely mix with the outside world (although in a city such a Worcester you really can't blame them).  Contrary to what it's name might suggest, Holy Cross is not a religious school by any means and although it's campus is home to a beautiful church, no one is required to go.  As it is an exclusively undergraduate institution, almost all of their students go on to attend top graduate schools.   Despite it's reputation for stellar academics, Holy Cross has been described as "Analogous with a J. Crew. Catalog" and "A drinking school with an intelligence problem." Certainly sounds preppy enough for me.

Miami University, OH
You might not expect to see a public school from the midwest on a list of preppy schools, but here you go.  This "public ivy" is by far the preppiest college in the midwest and probably the preppiest public university, second only to UVA of course.  UMiami Ohio has long been referred to as "J. Crew U" due to the dress of many of the students, which seems to include pressed jeans, oxford shirts, polos, monogramed clothing and, of course, Sperry Top-Siders for everyone. Despite being located in Oxford Ohio, it was named Miami university due to the Miami Native American tribe that once inhabited the area.  In a student conducted survey in 2010, 85% of the students admitted to getting emails from J. Crew.  Although fellow state school Ohio State University has a line of school clothing available from preppy fashion giant Vineyard Vines, it doesn't top what J. Crew U has accomplished.

Georgetown University, Washington DC
As a prestigious, top-tier university located in our nation's capital, it seems only natural that Georgetown University would earn a place on this list.   This former catholic college is said to be inhabited by students who love the area's strong cosmopolitan flavor.  The Official Preppy Handbook referred to Georgetown as having a "southern feeling with a dash of diplomatic corps.  It added that lacostes and top-siders were a must.  The Huffington Post mentioned that at Georgetown, backpacks were almost a faux paux and socks were rarely worn because as everyone knows, no true prep would wear socks with Sperrys.  It comes as no surprise that Georgetown would have many notable alumni in the fields of government and politics (including former United States President Bill Clinton), but they get extra prep points for graduate Abdullah of Jordan, reigning king of the Kingdom of Jordan who attended the Deerfield Academy in Deerfield Massachusetts.

Honorable Mentions - 
Babson College
Bowdoin College
Colby College
Colgate University
College of Charleston
College of William & Mary
Duke University
Elon University
Hamilton College
Hobart & William Smith Colleges
Hollins University
Sweet Briar College
Sewanee: University of the South
Union College
Vanderbilt University
Wheaton College
Williams College






Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Prep Schools in the News: Durham Academy

As a native New Englander, I haven't always paid tribute to the South on this blog, but I have to give them credit for this.

Durham, South Carolina is home to the elite Durham Academy, a coed day school with roughly 1,100 students.  I'd never heard of them until recently, but now I'm glad I have.  During the recent blizzard, the south found themselves dealing with a crisis that we in the north like to refer to as "snow."  They likely don't get too many snow days typically, but when they did, the head of this school knew just what to do.  Check out the link to the video below.


http://gawker.com/watch-two-teachers-rap-their-schools-snow-closing-anno-1522038680?utm_campaign=socialflow_gawker_facebook&utm_source=gawker_facebook&utm_medium=socialflow

Saturday, February 8, 2014

Prepdom Hall of Fame: The Preppiest People Throughout History

As we stated in previous posts, thoughough history, many of this countries best men and women attended private preparatory schools.  Not all of them stayed preppy afterewards, however.  Some, like Pete Seeger, chose to write folk songs while others aspired to greater things.  Those who never lost sight of what it truly means to be a prep were carefully selected to be a part of out Predom Hall of Fame.


As far as preppy dynasties go, there can be no greater example than the Kennedy family.
Patriarch Joseph Kennedy Sr. saw to it that his sons had the best of everything, including education.  Despite having to live in the shadow of his older brother Joe Jr. upon first arriving at Connecticut's Choate Rosemary Hall, John F. Kennedy (above, right), or Jack as he was known, quickly excelled at both academics and athletics.  Like his father and brother before him he attended Harvard University, and somehow found time to become a war hero before becoming president.  As a side note, it is a known fact that he shopped at Brooks Brothers.  A true prep if ever there was one.  His younger brother Robert (above, left) a graduate of Massachusetts's Milton Academy and Harvard University also earned his place in the hall of fame.
Had their older brother Joseph, also a Choate and Harvard alum not died too young in World War II, he doubtless would have had a future in politics as well.



Back when he was still known as Barry, Barack Obama attended the Punahou School in Honolulu Hawaii.  I'm sure how many elite prep schools there are in Hawaii, but it seems safe to say that Punahou is the most prestigious.  Having President Obama as a graduate certainly doesn't hurt their reputation.  He began his collegiate career at California's Occidental College, but transferred to Columbia University as a junior, from which he graduated.  After that, he enrolled in Harvard Law School and was made an editor of the Harvard Law Review.  By the end of his second year, he was president of the journal.  Not the last thing he'd become president of.  His wife, Michelle Obama is known for sporting cardigans from J. Crew, which means bonus prep points.




Here is a more detailed list of the Hall of Fame Members.  More will be added.

Edward Albee -
Prep School: Lawrenceville School (expelled), Choate Rosemary Hall
University: Trinity College
Went on to Become: Playwright; winner of the Tony Award for Best Play and Pulitzer Prize for Drama.  His plays include "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf" and "The Zoo Story."

Stephen Birmingham -
Prep School: The Hotchkiss School
University: Williams College
Went on to Become: Author of "Our Crowd," "The Grandees," and "Real Lace" and professor of writing at the University of Cincinnati.

Benjamin C. Bradlee -
Prep School: St. Mark's School
University: Harvard University
Went on to Become: Editor and Vice-President of the Washington Post.

George H.W. Bush -
Prep School: Phillips Academy Andover
University:  Yale University
Went on to Become: 41st President of the United States.

George W. Bush -
Prep School: Phillips Academy Andover
University: Yale University, Harvard Business School
Went on to Become: 43rd President of the United States.

Tucker Carlson -
Prep School: St. George's School
University: Trinity College
Went on to Become: Political News Correspondent and Conservative Commentator.

Stephen Colbert -
Prep School: Porter-Gaud School
University: Hampden-Sydney College (transferred), Northwestern University
Went on to Become: Emmy and Grammy award winning political satirist, writer, comedian, actor, and television host.

Buck Henry -
Pep School: Choate Rosemary Hall
University: Dartmouth College
Went on to Become: Academy Award nominated actor, writer, and film/television director.

John F. Kennedy -
Prep School: Choate Rosemary Hall
University: Harvard University
Went on to Become: 35th President of the United States

Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy -
Prep School: Ms. Porter's School
University: Vasar College (transfered), George Washington University
Went on to Become: First lady of the United States.

Robert F. Kennedy -
Prep School: Milton Academy
University: Harvard University
Went on to Become: United States Attorney General and Democratic Party Presidential Nominee.

John Kerry -
Prep School: St. Paul's School
University: Yale University, Boston College Law School
Went on to Become: 68th United States Secretary of State and Democratic Party Presidential Nominee.

John Knowles - 
Prep School: Phillips Exeter Academy
University: Yale University
Went on to Become: Author of quintessential prep school novel "A Separate Peace."

Tucker Max
Prep School: Blaire Academy
University: University of Chicago, Duke University Law School
Went on to Become: Author of numerous bestselling memoirs, including "I Hope They Serve Beer in Hell."

Ogden Nash -
Prep School: St. George's School
University: Harvard University (dropped out)
Went on to Become: Nationally renowned writer and poet.

Barack Obama -
Prep School: Punahau School
University: Columbia University, Harvard Law School
Went on to Become: 44th President of the United States.

Frederick Law Olmsted -
Prep School: Phillips Academy Andover
University: Yale University
Went on to Become: Landscape architect who designed for Phillips Academy, Berwick Academy, Groton School, Lawrenceville School, Pomfret School, St. Albans School, and  Nobel and Greenough School.  He also did design work for many colleges and universities such as University of California at Berkeley, Brawn Mawr College, Colgate University, Cornell University, Denison University, Miami University (Ohio), Mount Holyoke College, Smith College, Stanford University, Trinity College, University of Rochester, Washington University, Wellesley College, and Yale University.


Curtis Sittenfeld -
Prep School: Groton School
University: Stanford University
Went on to Become: Author of quintessential prep school novel "Prep" as well as others.

Colson Whitehead -
Prep School: Trinity School
University: Harvard University
Went on to Become: Author of such renowned novels as "The Intuitionist" and "Sag Harbor."


Thursday, January 16, 2014

Yes They Did! - 5 People Who You'd Never Think Were Prep School Alumni

The Prep School Pantheon is a somewhat extensive list and I don't blame you if you didn't take the time to read through the whole thing.  It includes some people who never outgrew the preppy image and others who are almost the opposite.  We've prepared a list of the most surprising people on the list.  Read on, but prepare to have your jaw drop.

Pete Seeger - Avon Old Farms School.
One of the most beloved and influential folk musicians on his generation, Seeger wrote many songs.  Although many of them, most famously "We Shall Overcome," are beautiful, timeless songs, they are about as far away from preppy as you can get.  Seeger is identified much more with the "hippie movement," although that is also partially due to all the work he did with artists such as Arlo Guthrie.  Seeger clearly didn't forget his education at the prestigious Avon Old Farms School of Avon Connecticut, though, as one of his songs was titled "What Did You Learn in School Today?"




Seth Macfarlane - Kent School
No, this is actually not a joke.  Seth Macfarlane, the comedic genius behind Family Guy, American Dad, The Cleveland Show and feature film Ted used to wear blazers and khakis to school.  A Kent native, Macfarlane later reveled in an interview that his mother had been a teacher at his alma mater.  Anyone familiar with Macfarlane's work will know that he is unquestionably a comedic mastermind, but even so, the irreverent humor that made Family Guy a success is far from classy and there's nothing remotely preppy about it, although Macfarlane did play off his own boarding school experiences when he sent character Chris Griffin to an elite boarding school known as "Morningwood Academy" in an episode that went on to spoof Dead Poets Society.


Steve Carrell - Middlesex School
Hard to believe that the 40 Year Old Virgin grew up a prep.  A native of Concord Massachusetts, he, like Macfarlane, attended his local private school, which happened to be among the most prestigious prep schools on the east coast.  According to The Hollywood Reporter, Carrell was a skilled hockey player who appeared in multiple school plays.  Not many prep school jocks also join the drama club, but Carrell has always been a talented guy.  After Middlesex, he attended Ohio's acclaimed Denison University.  His original plan was to become a lawyer, but fortunately for us, he chose acting instead.

Trey Anastasio - Taft School
Dubbed the "quintessential hippy band of the 20th century," Phish really is as far away from preppy as you can get, which is why we were so shocked to learn that frontman Ernest Joseph "Trey" Anastasio III is an alum of one of Connecticut's best prep schools, The Taft School to be specific.  It was there that he formed his first two bands, which were called Red Tide and Space Antelope.  During his time at Taft, he also met fellow songwriter The Dude of Life who helped pen such Phish hits as "Slave to the Traffic" and "Run Like an Antelope."  During Phish's first performance, which occurred during Anastasio's days at the University of Vermont, the hippie rockers used hockey sticks as mic stands...classic Vermont.

Stefani Germanotta (Lady Gaga) - Convent of the Sacred Heart
Here's something you probably didn't know - Lady Gaga attended the same posh Manhattan prep school as Paris and Nicky Hilton.  At first glance, Gaga seems like the very last person who would have attended a religious private school, particularly one with the name Convent of the Sacred Heart.  Her meat and bubble dresses don't exactly scream "catholic private school" and there's never been anything preppy about her songs.  I guess some people really do undergo complete transformations between high school and adult hood.  Learning to play the piano by ear at age 4, Gaga clearly had her smarts so it's a small wonder she was admitted to New York University, although she did not graduate, dropping out of school to pursue music full time, like so many musicians before her.

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

The Prep School Pantheon

Preparatory schools, be they boarding or day, graduate hundreds of students each year.  Some date back hundreds of years, such as the Roxbury Latin School, which was founded in 1645.  It has been referred to as the "oldest boys school in North America."  Not all those who attend prep schools are necessarily preppy, though.  The list we've provided may surprise you.  To make for easier reading, we've divided the list into categories.  Read on.

Entertainment -
Trey Antastasio - Taft School, Watertown CT
Mike Birbiglia - St. Mark's School, Southboro MA
Elizabeth Berkely - Cranbrook Schools, Bloomingfield Hills MI (x)
Humphry Bogart - Phillips Academy, Andover MA
Joy Bryant - Westminster School, Simsbury CT
Paul Butterfield - University of Chicago Laboratory Schools, Chicago IL
Steve Carrell - Middlesex School, Concord MA
Chevy Chase - Dalton School, New York NY
Mary Chapin Carpenter - Taft School, Watertown CT
Glenn Close - Choate Rosemary Hall, Wallingford CT
Stephen Colbert - Porter - Gaud School, Charleston SC
Chris Collingwood - The Hill School, Pottstown PA
Buster Crabbe - Punahau School, Honolulu HI
David Crosby - Cate School, Carpinteria CA
Jamie Lee Curtis - Choate Rosemary Hall - Wallingford CT
Blythe Danner, George School, Newton PA
Ted Danson - The Kent School, Kent CT
Bette Davis - Cushing Academy, Ashburnham MA
David Duchonvy - Collegiate School, New York NY
Adam Duritz - Taft School, Watertown CT
Jane Fonda - Emma Willard School, Troy NY
Jodie Foster - Choate Rosemary Hall - Wallingford CT
Matthew Fox - Deerfield Academy, Deerfield MA
Stefani Germanotta - Convent of the Sacred Heart, New York City NY
Paul Giamatti - Choate Rosemary Hall, Wallingford CT
Jake Gyllenhaal - Harvard-Westlake School, Los Angeles CA
Maggie Gyllenhaal - Harvard Westlake School, Los Angeles CA
Larry Hagman - Trinity School, New York NY
Anne Heche - Francis W. Parker School, Chicago IL
Ed Helms - The Westminster Schools, Atlanta GA
Buck Henry - Choate Rosemary Hall, Wallingford CT
Hal Holbrook - Culver Academies, Culver IA
Linda Hunt - Interlochen Arts Academy, Interlochen MI
William Hurt - Middlesex School, Concord MA
Rashida Jones - Buckley School, Sherman Oaks CA
Warner Klemperer - Cate School, Carpinteria CA
Tom Lehrer - Horace Mann School, New York City, NY
Tea Leoni - Brearly School, New York NY
Alan Jay Lerner - Choate Rosemary Hall, Wallingford CT
Huey Lewis - Lawrenceville School, Lawrenceville NJ
Lisa Loeb - Hockaday School, Dallas TX
Stacy London - Trinity School, New York City NY
Jon Lovitz - Harvard-Westlake School, Los Angeles CA
Seth Macfarlane - Kent School, Kent CT
Roger McGuinn - Latin School of Chicago, Chicago IL
Elizabeth Montgomery - Spence School, New York City NY
Frank Morgan - Trinity School, New York NY
Oliver Platt - Colorado Rocky Mountain School, Carbondale CO
Cole Porter - Worcester Academy, Worcester, MA
Keshia Knight Pulliam - Foxcroft School, Middleburg VA
Chris Raab - Church Farm School, Exton PA
Bonnie Raitt - Oakwood Friends School, Poughkeepsie NY
Christopher Reeve - Princeton Day School, Princeton NJ
Kyra Sedgwick - Friends Seminary, New York NY
Pete Seger - Avon Old Farms School, Avon CT
Wallace Shawn - Putney School, Putney VT
M. Night Shyamalan - Episcopal Academy, Newton Square PA
Stephen Sondheim - George School, Newton PA
James Spader - Brooks School, North Andover MA
James Stewart - Mercersburg Academy, Percersburg PA
Sufjan Stevens - Interlochen Center for the Arts, Interlochen MI
Stephen Stills - Admiral Farragut Academy - Pine Beach, NJ
James Taylor - Milton Academy, Milton MA
Gene Tierney - Miss Porter's School, Farmington CT
Justin Theroux - Buxton School, Williamstown MA
Uma Thurman - Northfield Mt. Hermon School, Northfield MA
Rufus Wainwright - Milbrook School, Milbrook NY
Joss Wedon - Riverdale Country School, New York City NY
Carnie Wilson - Oakwood School, Los Angeles CA
Reese Witherspoon - Harpeth Hall, Nashville TN
Jeffrey Wright - St. Alban's School, Washington D.C.
James Van Der Beek - Cheshire Academy, Cheshire CT


Literature -
Edward Albee - Choate Rosemary Hall, Wallingford CT
Louis Auchincloss - Groton School, Groton MA
Dan Brown - Phillips Exeter Academy, Exeter NH
William F. Buckley Jr. - Millbrook School, Millbrook NY
Truman Capote - Dwight School, New York City, NY
John Dos Passos - Choate Rosemary Hall, Wallingford CT
T.S. Eliot - Milton Academy, Milton MA
F. Scott Fitzgerald - Newman School, Hackensack NJ
John Green - Indian Springs School, India Springs Village AL
John Irving - Phillips Exeter Academy, Exeter NH
Jack Kerouac - Horace Mann School, New York NY
John Knowles - Phillips Exeter Academy, Exeter NH
Tucker Max - Blair Academy, Blairstown NJ
Bill Matthews - Berkshire School, Sheffield MA
Margaret Mitchell - Washington Seminary
Odgen Nash - St. George's School, Middletown RI
Edward Said - Northfield Mt. Hermon School, Northfield MA
Aram Sayoyan - Trinity School, New York City NY
Curtis Sittenfeld - Groton School, Groton MA
William Stryon - Christchurch School, Christchurch VA
Gore Vidal - Phillips Exeter Academy, Exeter NH
DeWitt Wallace - Northfield Mt. Hermon School, Northfield MA
Thornton Wilder - Thacher School, Ojai CA (x)
Colson Whitehead - Trinity School, New York NY
William Carlos Williams - Horace Mann School, New York City NY
Richard Yates - Avon Old Farms School, Avon CT



Business -
S. Prestly Blake - Northfield Mt. Hermon School, Northfield MA
Ivan Boesky - Cranbrook Schools, Bloomingfield Hills MI (x)
Benjamin Crowninshield Bradlee - St. Mark's School, Southborough MA
Jamie Dimon - Browning School, New York City, NY
Tom First - Concord Academy, Concord MA
Steve Forbes - Brooks School, North Andover MA
William Randolph Hurst - St. Paul's Preparatory School, Concord NH
Richard Mellon Scaife - Deerfield Academy, Deerfield MA
George Steinbrenner - Culver Academies, Culver IA
Donald Trump - New York Military Academy, Cornwall-on-Hudson NY
Ted Turner - McCallie School, Chatanooga TN
Mark Zuckerberg - Phillips Exeter Academy, Exeter NH



Politics -
Howard Baker - McCallie School, Chatanooga TN
George Herbert Walker Bush - Phillips Academy Andover, Andover MA
George Walker Bush - Phillips Academy Andover, Andover MA
Peter Fisher - Concord Academy, Concord MA
John Fitzgerald Kennedy - Choate Rosemary Hall, Wallingford CT
Robert Francis Kennedy - Milton Academy, Milton MA
Edward Kennedy - Milton Academy, Milton MA
Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis - Miss Porter's School, Farmington CT (although not a politician herself, she was known for being married to one)
John Kerry - St. Paul's School, Conchord NH
John McCain - Episcopal High School, Alexandria VA
Barack Obama - Punahau School, Honolulu HI
Deval Patrick - Milton Academy, Milton MA
Mitt Romney - Cranbrook Schools, Bloomingfield Hills MI
Franklin Delano Roosevelt - Groton School, Groton MA
Eliot Spitzer - Horace Mann School, New York City NY
Daniel Webster - Phillips Exeter Academy, Exeter NH


Other -
Josephine Patterson Albright - Foxcroft School, Middleburg VA
Tina Barney - Spence School, New York NY
Stephen Birmingham - Hotchkiss School, Lakeville CT
Judge Robert Bork - Hotchkiss School, Lakeville CT
Tucker Carlson - St. George's School, Middletown RI
Roy Cohn - Horace Mann School, New York City NY
Anderson Cooper - Dalton School, New York City, NY
Joseph Cornell - Phillips Academy Andover, Andover MA
Daniel Ellsberg - Cranbrook Schools, Bloomingfield Hills MI
Buckminster Fuller - Milton Academy, Milton MA
John Lahr - Riverdale Country School, New York City, NY
Sally Mann - Putney School, Putney VT (photographer)
Dr. William H. Masters - Lawrenceville School, Lawrenceville NJ
Bill Nye - Sidwell Friends School, Washington D.C.
Keith Oblermann - Hackley School, Tarrytown NY
Georgia O'Keeffe - Chatam Hall, Chatam VA
Frederick Law Olmosted - Phillips Academy Andover, Andover MA
Princess Leila Pahlavi - Rye Country Day School, Rye NY
James Pierpont - Roxbury Latin School, Roxbury MA
Zac Posen - Saint Ann's School, New York City NY
John Silas Reed - Morristown School, Morristown NJ
Sally Ride - Harvard - Westlake School, Los Angeles CA
Chris 'Mad Dog' Russo - Darrow School, New Lebanon NY
Ilyasah Shabazz - The Masters School, West Simsbury CT
Dr. Benjamin Spock - Phillips Academy Andover, Andover MA
Elizabeth Cady Stanton - Emma Willard School, Troy NY
Vera Wang - Chapin School, New York NY



(x) = did not graduate
**more to come






Saturday, September 14, 2013

The Silver Screen - Prep School Films

Over the years, Hollywood has often tried to capture the prep school essence on film.  While some of these films are cinematic masterpieces, others fall short.  Often, prep schools and their students are portrayed a certain way  on the silver screen.  Is it accurate?  You be the judge.  There have been numerous preppy films over the years and we can't review them all, but here are, in my opinion, the top four best prep school films to date.  Prep or not, each film comes highly recommended.


My favorite film to date is Dead Poet's Society.  It really is the ultimate prep school film, complete with privileged white kids, a pretentious, stuffy school headmaster, blowhard parents, and even an underdog triumph or two. 
Set in the 1950's, the story begins at the prestigious, conservative Welton Academy (a fictional Exeter), an all white, all boys prep school in Vermont.  It is an age of cheerless conformity until Mr. Keating (Robin Williams), a Welton alum returns to teach English.  Wanting the boys to learn to think for themselves, he inspires them make their lives extraordinary with the iconic phrase "Carpe Diem, Lads."  Such boys as Keating's students are prone to society telling them what they could and couldn't do.   As the story unfolds, the boys learn to take chances, face their demons (or in some cases, their parents) and above all, lead happy lives.  While there are some unquestioningly sad moments, this truly is one of the greatest films ever made.  The final scene could bring a tear to a glass eye.  Absolutely worth a watch.  Every school needs a teacher like Mr. Keating.  I certainly wish my prep school could have had one.


 Second on the list is a somewhat underrated adolescent drama known as The Emperor's Club.  Kevin Kline stars as a passionate history teacher at the fictional St. Benedict's School, another posh, New England prep school.  Like Mr. Keating, he wants to inspire his students to lead extraordinary lives and asks them "How will history remember you?"  Everything seems to be going well until a new student joins his class.  Sedgewick Bell (Elijah Wood) is the son of a U.S. senator and your classic spoiled rich kid.  Smart, but cocky and rebellious he immediately stirs up trouble wherever he goes.  Kline vows to help the boy, but he soon realizes he may have his work cut out for him and that's where the movie gets interesting.  There are definitely some similarities to Dead Poet's Society and some have even gone so far as to call this movie a rip-off, but they are by no means the same film. Watch them both and you will seen the distinctive differences.  Also appearing is a teenage Jessie Eisenberg, before he got to Harvard, who costars as one of Sedgewick's friends.  For the millions who loved Dead Poet's Society, this film is definitely worth watching.

The next film on our list has a slightly darker, certainly more dramatic feel.  School Ties was also set in the 1950's, but unlike Dead Poet's Society, it pays homage to the times in a different way; tackling racism and prejudice   Brendan Frasier stars as David Green, a working class, jewish teen from Scranton PA who is awarded a football scholarship to the prestigious St. Matthew's Academy in Massachusetts.  The posh New England world is far removed from the working class mill town where he grew up and David is forced to hide his jewish roots from his wealthy, sometimes arrogant and bigoted classmates.  That said, he bonds well with them and becomes a football star.  Everything is going great until he mistakenly crosses his wealthiest classmate and trouble instantly follows, forcing David to consider who he is, what he wants, and what he stands for.  The film is stolen by Matt Damon, who stars as Charlie Dillion, the arrogant, wealthy head boy who's stoplight David steals without meaning to.  Dillion, the film's antagonist, is the classic New England prep school jerk; wealthy and arrogant with no concern for the less fortunate and willing to screw anyone over to get what he wants. Also appearing are Ben Affleck and Chris O' Donnel, who appear as classmates of David and Charlie.  School Ties may make you reconsider sending your kids to a New England prep school, but this film does not accurately portray such schools in current times.  There is some racism and anti-seminism displayed, but if that sort of thing doesn't bother you, it's definitely worth a watch.  There are some strong messages about friendship and loyalty.


Our final film on the list is one of the only prep school comedies, at least to my knowledge.  Outside Providence is the story of Tim, a working class kid from blue collar Providence Rhode Island.  He's happy stirring up trouble with his friends and causing havoc wherever he goes, but when he damages a police car, he's finally gone too far.  His father (Alec Baldwin) is a working class, beer swilling jerk, but when Tim crosses a line, he decides to send him to a posh boarding school where he can't get into trouble.  How a blue collar working can afford to put his kid through an expensive private school is never explained, but from there the film gets interesting.  Tim doesn't meet the same fate as David Green, as his film is set in a different era.  In fact, his story is much funnier, although there are a few tender moments.  Along his journey he falls in love and learns about a new way of life.  This film doesn't have the emotional depth of Dead Poet's Society or the life lessons of School Ties, but it's a good watch, particularly if you like to laugh.

Honorable mentions -
Six Degrees of Separation
Igby Goes Down
Goodbye, Mr. Chips.




Thursday, August 29, 2013

Preppy Footwear

Of course, no outfit is complete without proper footwear.  I've decided to provide a list of the best preppy shoes.  Different shoes go with different outfits and colors, but the best kinds are the ones that will go with most anything.



 The ultimate preppy shoe will always be the top-sider boat shoe, made famous by Sperry (pictured left).  There have been many cheap knock offs such as Island Surf, but Sperry's are the real top-siders.  Their classic brown color means they can go with just about any outfit, be it formal or casual, although too formal will warrant something more dressy, such as wingtips.  They were originally designed to be worn on boats.  It stands to reason that if your dad just spent half a million dollars on a boat, he's not going to want you marking up the deck with your shoes.  Thanks to the non-marking souls of top-siders though, that problem has ceased to exist.  They come in many colors, but with shoes like these, you really can't go wrong.  Sperry's can even be found at J Crew, a store that doesn't always carry products from different labels.

H.G. Bass also features a line of good boat shoes, but their most notable creation is the Weejun Penny Loafer (pictures right).  Although more formal than top-siders, Weejuns can also go with most outfits, although black may be too formal for casual occasions.  Brown weejuns tend to go better with most things.  These shoes come in many colors and patterns, from the classic solid colors such as brown and black to more daring patterns such as stripped, denim, or even plaid.  Plaid weejuns are great shoes (I own a pair myself) although they can be difficult to match with certain shirts and pants or shorts.  That said, If you want an eye catching shoes, there's no better model out there.  Anyone who ever watched "Mr. Rogers" may recall that the star of that shoe wore Penny Loafers.  These shoes were popular in the 1970's but thanks to Bass, their making a come back.  As a side note, if you walk around with an actual penny in the front compartment, it won't fall out.  I know from experience.  The ultimate formal shoe will always be the wingtop, though.



Of course, some occasions call for sneakers, and that's where Keds come in.  These shoes were popular in the 1940's and afterwards, but now their making, or have made a comeback, which is great.  Keds look good, and their comfortable, fine for most casual athletic activity.  Vans, which are similar to Keds and come in more colors, are also acceptable, and they are
even available at J Crew (pictured below).