Twenty-five years before the Manhattan Project created the town of Los Alamos the Pajarito Plateau was home to an elite prep school for boys ages twelve to eighteen. The Los Alamos Ranch School combined a robust outdoor life and a carefully cultivated wilderness experience with a rigorous academic program and the structured discipline of a Boy Scout troop perfectly mirroring the Progressive Era's quest for perfection.John Wirth's father Cecil taught at the school and directed its summer camp. John spent his early childhood at the school along with his brother Tim later a U.S. Senator from Colorado. Drawing on oral accounts memoirs and archival documents as well as John's firsthand knowledge and family lore the authors situate the school within the educational trends of the day and New Mexico's cultural milieu.Wirth and Aldrich examine the influence of the school's controversial director Albert J. Connell who was roundly disliked by two of the best-known students Gore Vidal and William S. Burroughs. Many other students reported their time at the school to be a profoundly positive often life-changing experience. Additional chapters recount the growing-up experiences of ranch workers' children and the role the school played in their lives and those of area residents.
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