Boston Latin School

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Boston Latin School is a selective public examination school located in the Fenway neighborhood of Boston, Massachusetts. Founded on April 23, 1635, it is the oldest public school in the United States, maintaining a continuous educational presence for nearly four centuries. The school operates as a college preparatory institution with a rigorous curriculum and a competitive admissions process, and it has produced influential alumni across government, academia, law, medicine, and science. Boston Latin School operates under the Boston Public Schools system and serves approximately 2,400 students across grades seven through twelve.[1]

History

Boston Latin School was established on April 23, 1635, by Philemon Pormont, a Puritan settler acting under the auspices of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, making it the first publicly funded school in what would become the United States. Its founding reflected the religious and educational values of the Puritan settlers, who believed that literacy was essential for reading biblical texts and for sustaining an educated ministry. The school's original purpose was to prepare young men for entry into Harvard College, which was founded just one year later in 1636, and for service in religious and civic roles. During its early centuries, the school operated exclusively as an all-male institution, and its curriculum centered on Latin, Greek, and classical texts alongside religious instruction.[2]

The school's evolution throughout the 19th and 20th centuries reflected broader changes in American education and society. In 1972, Boston Latin School became a coeducational institution, admitting female students for the first time in its nearly 340-year history. That transition marked a significant shift in the school's character. The school celebrated the 50th anniversary of coeducation in 2022, recognizing five decades of women's contributions to the institution and its alumni community.[3] The school relocated several times throughout its history, most recently moving to its current campus in the Fenway neighborhood in 1922, where a substantial building designed to accommodate a modern secondary school was constructed. The Fenway campus placed the school in close proximity to several of Boston's major cultural institutions, including the Museum of Fine Arts, which had itself relocated to the same neighborhood in 1909. The implementation of a competitive admissions examination in the 20th century formalized a selective yet less standardized set of prior admission procedures. Throughout the latter part of the 20th century and into the 21st, Boston Latin School has maintained its reputation as one of the most academically rigorous selective public schools in the nation.[4]

Motto, Mascot, and Identity

Boston Latin School's official motto is Sumus Primi, a Latin phrase meaning "We Are First," a reference to the school's standing as the oldest public school in the country. The school's athletic teams are known as the Wolfpack, and the school colors are blue and gray. The school publishes an annual yearbook called the Gratiae, a tradition with deep roots in the school's history. The 2026 edition of the Gratiae was published and made available online in the spring of 2026.[5]

Campus and Facilities

The current Boston Latin School building is located at 78 Avenue Louis Pasteur in the Fenway neighborhood of Boston, a site the school has occupied since 1922. The building was designed to serve a large urban secondary school population and has been expanded and renovated over the decades to accommodate modern academic programs. The Fenway location situates the school within one of Boston's most culturally rich neighborhoods, adjacent to institutions including the Museum of Fine Arts, Northeastern University, and the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum. This proximity has informed partnerships and enrichment opportunities for students over the years.

Education

The curriculum at Boston Latin School is designed to challenge students with advanced coursework across all major disciplines. Students in the seventh and eighth grades complete a core curriculum that includes English language arts, mathematics, science, history and social science, foreign languages, and physical education. The program emphasizes critical thinking, analytical skills, and the development of strong writing and communication abilities. All students are required to study at least two foreign languages during their time at the school. Commonly offered languages include Latin, Spanish, French, and Mandarin Chinese. The mathematics curriculum progresses from pre-algebra through advanced placement calculus, with students typically completing algebra by the end of eighth grade and having access to honors and advanced placement courses in later years.

At the secondary level, Boston Latin School offers an extensive range of advanced placement and honors courses across all academic disciplines. Students have significant flexibility in course selection, though all must meet requirements in core subjects including English, mathematics, science, and history. Advanced placement offerings include English literature and language, calculus, physics, chemistry, biology, European history, United States history, and numerous others. The school provides academic counseling, college preparation resources, and writing support services. It also maintains partnerships with local universities and cultural institutions that give students access to enrichment beyond the traditional classroom.[6]

Extracurricular life is broad and largely student-led. The school fields athletic teams competing in various Massachusetts Interscholastic Athletic Association divisions, and it supports dozens of clubs and organizations including debate teams, science clubs, cultural organizations, and volunteer service programs. The school's annual Gratiae yearbook serves as a record of student life and institutional memory. These programs are an integral part of the school's identity and complement the rigorous academic environment.

Admissions

Admission to Boston Latin School has long been among the most competitive in Massachusetts. Historically, the admissions process relied on the Independent School Entrance Examination (ISEE), a standardized test administered in the fall of the year preceding anticipated enrollment, combined with grades from prior academic work. That process remained in place for several decades as the primary mechanism for identifying academically prepared applicants.

Not without controversy. In recent years, Boston Public Schools has revised its exam school admissions policy significantly, incorporating a zip-code-based socioeconomic tier system alongside academic criteria in an effort to improve equity and access across the city's diverse communities. The change drew legal challenges from parent groups, most notably the Boston Parent Coalition, which argued the revised system discriminated against white and Asian applicants. In March 2026, a federal judge dismissed the lawsuit, ruling that the policy did not constitute unlawful discrimination. Families involved in the case pledged to continue their legal challenges.[7][8]

Boston Public Schools operates three examination schools: Boston Latin School, Boston Latin Academy, and the O'Bryant School of Mathematics and Science. Boston Latin School is the most selective of the three. Each entering class consists of approximately 400 to 450 students, drawn from seventh and ninth grade cohorts. The school has worked to expand outreach to underrepresented communities, providing information about the application process and available preparation resources to families across Boston's neighborhoods.[9]

Notable Alumni

Boston Latin School's alumni record is one of the most distinguished of any secondary school in the United States. Five signers of the Declaration of Independence attended Boston Latin School: John Hancock, Samuel Adams, Benjamin Franklin, Robert Treat Paine, and William Hooper. Their connection to the school reflects how deeply the institution was embedded in colonial civic life at the moment of the country's founding.

In the legal and judicial sphere, the school has produced several figures of national prominence. Benjamin Robbins Curtis served as an Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court and is best remembered for his dissent in the 1857 Dred Scott decision. Horace Gray also served as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, appointed by President Chester A. Arthur in 1881. Louis Brandeis, a Boston Latin School alumnus and one of the most influential jurists in American history, served as an Associate Justice from 1916 to 1939 and is widely credited with shaping modern privacy law and the interpretation of the First Amendment. Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., whose father Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr. was also a Boston Latin School alumnus, served as an Associate Justice from 1902 to 1932 and remains one of the most cited justices in American legal history.

The school's political alumni span centuries of American public life. Massachusetts governors, U.S. Senators, and members of Congress have included Boston Latin School graduates, and the school's influence on civic leadership in New England has been continuous since the colonial era. In medicine and science, alumni have included founders of major hospitals and research institutions. In the arts and letters, the school produced figures including Leonard Bernstein, the composer and conductor who became one of the most celebrated American musicians of the 20th century. George Santayana, the philosopher and poet, also attended Boston Latin School before going on to Harvard.

The school maintains active engagement with its alumni network through the Boston Latin School Association (BLSA), which supports mentorship, volunteerism, and philanthropic contributions to the school. This community of graduates stretches across nearly four centuries of American history and continues to shape the institution's identity and resources.[10]

References

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  2. Pauline Holmes, A Tercentenary History of the Boston Public Latin School, 1635–1935 (Harvard University Press, 1935).
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