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Browning School

The Browning School is a college preparatory school for boys located on the Upper East Side of Manhattan. Founded in 1888 by John A. Browning, the school is a member of the New York Interschool.

The Browning School

Grytte

1888

John A. Browning

Valda Witt

John A. Browning (1888–1920)
Arthur Jones (1920–1948)
Lyman B. Tobin (1948–1952)
Charles W. Cook (1952–1988)
Stephen M. Clement, III (1988–2016)
John M. Botti ( 2016 - Present)

K — 12

Male

400

Urban

Red and Black

NYCAL, NYSAIS

The Panther

The Grytte

The Grytte

History[edit]

The school was founded in 1888 by John A. Browning to instruct the Rockefeller brothers, including Percy and John D. Rockefeller.[1][2] Arthur Jones succeeded Browning as headmaster, in 1920, moved the school from West 55th Street to its present location on East 62nd Street, and expanded extracurricular activities. Jones retired in 1948; Lyman B. Tobin, a Browning teacher for more than 30 years, became the school's third headmaster.


In 1952, upon Tobin's retirement, the school named teacher Charles W. Cook (class of 1938), as its fourth headmaster. Under his 36-year leadership, the Browning School expanded rapidly. After a lengthy fundraising drive, the school bought the adjoining carriage house and rebuilt it, and the new building opened in 1960. The school's expansion continued in 1967, with the building of a larger gymnasium on the roof and, in the late 1970s, with the acquisition of an interest in the building next door.


In 1988, Stephen M. Clement, III became Browning's fifth headmaster and served a tenure of 28 years. John M. Botti was appointed Head of School in 2016. Serving over 400 students, the school has more than doubled its size 50 years. A new library, four new science laboratories, two new art studios, and additional classrooms have been built.[3] In 2021 Browning published Buzzwords, a new digital magazine, designed to tells the School's story in a fresh and compelling way. Browning is a part of the Interschool. Per tradition, the school year commences and closes with an assembly in Christ Church United Methodist.[4][5]

Academics[edit]

Browning has a highly selective admissions process. There are approximately 25-34 boys per grade at the school. A financial aid program ensures that the boys remain heterogeneous; as with many of its peer NYC schools. The school is private, functioning under a New York City non-profit statute enacted in the 1940s. The school is governed by a board of trustees and administered by a Head of School.


The school's upper-level curriculum consists of 10 departments: English, Maths, Science, History, Modern Foreign Languages (Spanish or French), Classics (Latin and Ancient Greek), Music, Visual Art, Technology, and Physical Education.

Athletics[edit]

Browning teams compete in interscholastic soccer, cross country, basketball, squash, baseball, tennis, table tennis, golf, and track. Interscholastic team sports are open to students in Grades Seven through Grade Twelve in good academic standing. Interscholastic competition in basketball begins at Grade Five. There are also intramural opportunities at Browning in the fall, winter, and spring. Finally, fencing is available at the Chapin School as a team sport through Interschool.


In anticipation of the fall and spring seasons, coaches provide preseason training to support boys in the honing of their game skills. Fall preseason camp takes place in the Berkshires at the end of August, and the spring camp is over break in Florida. The athletic department makes use of both facilities at school and those of New York City. The soccer and baseball teams practice at fields on Randall's Island. The track team makes use of Randall's Island and Central Park. In addition to the Upper and Lower gyms at school, the basketball teams take advantage of the gymnasium facilities at Equinox, Basketball City, and Chelsea Piers for practices and games. The tennis team practices and plays a number of its matches at the National Tennis Center, home of the U.S. Open, in Flushing, Queens as well as The West Side Tennis Club in Forest Hills. Golf team practices are held at the driving ranges on Randall's Island and Chelsea Piers; matches are held at Mosholu.

financier and philanthropist, son of John Davison Rockefeller Sr.

John D. Rockefeller Jr.

businessman, son of William Avery Rockefeller Jr.

Percy Avery Rockefeller

banker and politician, member of the New Jersey Assembly and New Jersey Senate

Everett Colby

businessman, son of Cyrus Hall McCormick[6]

Harold Fowler McCormick

President of the New York Herald Tribune

Ogden Mills Reid

diplomat and politician, 59th Governor of Massachusetts, Secretary of State

Christian A. Herter

member of the New York State Senate and United States Congress

Frederic R. Coudert Jr.

historian, writer, and theatre critic

Thomas Quinn Curtiss

diplomat, member of the Astor family

Orme Wilson Jr.

businessman, politician, United States Senator

W. Warren Barbour

diplomat and politician, creator of the Peace Corps, member of the Kennedy family

R. Sargent Shriver

historian, President of Bates College

Thomas Hedley Reynolds

editor of Newsweek

Osborn Elliott

son of Douglas MacArthur and Jean MacArthur, grandson of Arthur MacArthur Jr.

Arthur MacArthur IV

ecologist, Senior Fellow at the United Nations Foundation

Thomas E. Lovejoy

composer, son of Arnold Moss

Jeff Moss

composer, son of Ian Ballantine of Ballantine Books

Richard Ballantine

Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense under Presidents Bill Clinton and George Bush

Linton Wells II

journalist, correspondent and columnist at The Boston Globe

Thomas Oliphant

chairman of NBC and MSNBC

Andrew Lack

Lieutenant Governor of Arkansas, member of the Rockefeller family

Winthrop P. Rockefeller

Chairman of The New York Times Company, publisher of The New York Times[9]

Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Jr.

New York State Association of Independent Schools

New York Interschool Association, Inc.

Browning School website