The Bolles School 博尔斯学校

描述

The Bolles School 博尔斯学校

The Bolles School 博尔斯学校

学校特色

Bolles School(普尔斯学校)创立于1933年,位于佛罗里达州东北部港口城市 – 杰克逊维尔Jacksonville,是一所男女日间及寄宿学校,也是该州著名的私立大学预科学校。100% Bolles学生毕业后都可以进入大学院校继续深造。

Bollwa学校特色之一是宏伟的西班牙堡垒式建筑风格,学生们能在这么美丽及阳光充裕的校园生活也是一件美好的事(注1)。

学生大学录取包括以下名校:

约翰霍普金斯大学、加州大学各分校、乔治敦大学,北卡罗讷大学、波士顿大学、哥伦比亚大学、弗吉利亚大学、佛罗里达大学、芝加哥大学等。

学校资料

环境市郊
学校类别美国中学
学费~$47,000美金
住宿安排校内宿舍 (9-12班)
学校网址 http://www.bolles.org/page.cfm?p=2602
州份Florida 佛罗里达州 (FL)
邻近城市奥兰多(2小时车)
建校年份1933
入学要求
收生季度
开授班级学前至12班
学生人数~17,000 (高中790 人)
海外学生~6%
师生比例11:1 (平均每班15学生)
地图

地图连结

学术

Bolles 提供严谨的大学准备课程、并辅以广泛的表演艺术与科技课程、还有获得过州奖杯的体育运动、国际知名的游泳课程等。

AP 课程包括

Art History, Biology, Calculus AB, Calculus BC, Chemistry, Comparative Government, Computer Science A, English III, English IV, French V, Latin IV, Latin V, Modern European History, Physics B, Portfolio 2D, Portfolio 3D, Portfolio Drawing, Spanish V, Statistics, U.S. Government, U.S. History.

体育运动项目包括

棒球、篮球、越野跑步、潜水、足球、高尔夫、曲棍球、垒球、游泳、网球、排球、田径以及摔跤等。

其它

学校前身是一所军事学校,学校招收幼儿园至12年级的学生,寄宿生招收7到12年班学生,这些寄宿生来自全世界约20多个国家。Bolles学校分为四个校区,San Jose校区(9-12年级),Bartram Campus校区(6-8年级),Whitehurst校区(幼儿园-5年级)和Ponte Vedra Beach校区(幼儿园-5年级)。

[注1] Bolles 历史 (抱歉-只提供英文)

History of THE BOLLES SCHOOL

http://www.whitewayrealty.com/the-bolles-school/history-of-the-bolles-school

It went up in six months, like an inspiration, on a river bluff 20 feet high once owned by the colorful slave trader and cotton planter Zephania Kingsley.

It was a surprisingly beautiful hotel with an authentic Castilian atmosphere. The year was 1926. Asked to render the effect of an ancient Spanish castle, architects Marsh and Saxlebye came up with a asterpiece of Old World lookalikes. And for tourists who valued charm and dignity and repose, the developers shot the works. From pecky cypress to broken tile, from parchment tones to old ivory walls. Who would have renamed that in less than three years the elite San Jose Hotel would be on the block?

Who could have guessed that within a decade its twin watchtowers and noble archways would advertise the merits of a fashionable boys military school?

Richard J. Bolles, the flamboyant New York capitalist, had been in Jacksonville since 1908, with an office in the Bisbee Building on West Forsyth and residence at the Seminole Club. His secretary was Agnes W. Cain, a shrewd 36-year-old Cleveland businesswoman who had been with him during his heyday in Colorado. He died suddenly in 1917. Care of his estate went to Agnes Cain.

By this time Agnes was well established in local real estate and investment circles. She had also met young Roger Painter, who had started to work as an office boy at four dollars a week for Richard J. Bolles the year before the millionaire’s death. They were married in February 1923.

It was the eve of the Florida boom, the real estate and loan business looked mighty good, and when the San Jose Hotel opened on January 1, 1926, Agnes Cain Painter held the first mortgage of $200,000. A year later she held a personal property mortgage on all the hotel’s expensive furniture, fixtures, and equipment. Little did she know that in just another year she would be filing a foreclosure action. But it happened. Agnes bought the hotel at a foreclosure sale on the courthouse steps.

So what do you do with a million-dollar tourist hotel when the real estate market has just fallen out? You don’t miss a beat. You form a corporation (Bolles Investment Company) and elect officers (Agnes Painter, President and Treasurer; Roger Painter, Secretary). Then you sell the hotel and all its fancy furnishings to this same Bolles Investment Company for $225,000 payable entirely in capital stock. Then you issue shares in the corporation and,since you and the Richard J. Bolles Estate own most of the shares, you end up with the controlling interest. You lease the property first to a hotel group that drops $100,000 in no time, then to the Florida Military Academy for three years.

It wasn’t long before Agnes and Roger Painter found themselves not only collecting rent from the Florida Military Academy but taking a keen interest in its daily operation. By1929,they began living on the school grounds.

Thus, when the Florida Military Academy failed to meet its financial obligations and was given notice in the summer of 1932 that it would have to vacate by the end of the year, it was not hard for Agnes and Roger to accept the suggestion of local attorney John C. Cooper, Jr.: “Why don’t you form a school out there? The community needs one.”

Neither of them had a formal education. Nor a burning zeal to found an educational institution, for that matter. But they had become attached to the boys. Since it was a boys school, Roger, whose strong suit was in handling people, would be president and have “active direction of the administration and business management of the new school.” Agnes would remain in the background as the unseen power. By special dispensation of the state, Roger would be part of the Florida militia with the rank of Lt. Colonel.

Selecting a new name would pose no problem. What else but the name found on important documents connected with the hotel since its creation several years ago? The Bolles School.