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  1. Connect With Old Classmates from Boston Latin School On Classmates.com. Search Classmates® For Yearbooks, Alumni & Old Sweethearts from High School. Register Free

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  1. Latin School owes much to Epes Sargent Dixwell, who succeeded Dillaway, for during his 15 years as Head Master, he founded the Boston Latin School Association in 1844 and made Gould's dream of a school library a reality. 1844 also marked the establishment of a new school building on Bedford Street. By 1847, the required age for applicants was ...

  2. 300 Fenway, Palace Road Building, Suite B313 Boston, MA 02115 Phone: (617) 424-1635 blsa@blsa.org

  3. Latin School owes much to Epes Sargent Dixwell, who succeeded Dillaway, for during his 15 years as Head Master, he founded the Boston Latin School Association in 1844 and made Gould's dream of a school library a reality. 1844 also marked the establishment of a new school building on Bedford Street. By 1847, the required age for applicants was ...

  4. News. From Homeroom 003 and 030: Morning Announcers. By David Wang (V) & Oanh Nguyen (VI), Contributing Writers. For years, former Boston Latin School Algebra 1 teacher Mrs. Monica Gribaudo’s sixie homeroom did the Pledge of Allegiance. Now that she is retired,... BLS Clubs Cook Up Success.

  5. Boston Latin School, founded in 1635, is the oldest school in the United States, serving an economically and culturally diverse population of students in grades 7 to 12. BLS seeks to ground it's students in a contemporary classical education to be prepared for successful college studies, responsible and engaged citizenship, and rewarding life.

  6. Although it has changed locations, the public school is still operating today. On April 23, 1635, the first public school in what would become the United States was established in Boston, Massachusetts. Known as the Boston Latin School, this boys-only public secondary school was led by schoolmaster Philemon Pormont, a Puritan settler.

  7. In 1972 Boston Latin School started its acceptance of female students as well. Five of the signers of the Declaration of Independence attended Boston Latin School: Samuel Adams, John Hancock, Robert Treat Paine, William Hooper and Benjamin Franklin, who unbelievably was the only one of the five who did not graduate.