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St. Mark's School of Texas
St. Mark's School of Texas opened in 1906 as a non-sectarian college-preparatory day school for boys in grades 1 through 12, educating approximately 900...
St. Mark's School of Texas
St. Mark's School of Texas opened in 1906 as a non-sectarian college-preparatory day school for boys in grades 1 through 12, educating approximately 900 students on a single campus in North Dallas. Its endowment emerged as a separate asset pool over decades of capital campaigns, including contributions from alumni like Ross Perot Jr. ('77) and private equity investor Tom Hicks, whose names appear on campus facilities. The school itself — not a family office — governs the endowment through a board committee, making it a rare case where K-12 institutional capital operates with governance DNA transplanted from private markets. The investment committee runs a diversified strategy spanning public equities, fixed income, private equity, real assets, and hedge funds — the full institutional toolkit — applied to a pool we estimate at roughly $200 million. The chair, John Rocchio, co-founded TPG Growth, linking the committee's lens to a platform that has backed companies such as Airbnb, Uber, and Spotify. Board trustee Robert Kaplan brings the macro perspective of a former Dallas Federal Reserve president. This dual private-markets-and-macro architecture means the committee can evaluate venture and buyout co-investments alongside traditional asset-liability work in a single room, a structural advantage few secondary-school endowments possess. The school discloses no headcount for the investment office, relying instead on the volunteer committee and outside managers. The endowment supports operations alongside the St. Mark's Fund, an annual giving vehicle, and planned giving programs including the Terrill Society. In May 2026, the school hosted President George W. Bush as its Spring Convocation speaker, reinforcing the Dallas network that feeds both philanthropic support and the committee's pipeline of investment relationships. What separates this endowment from its peer secondary schools is not size but governance density. A TPG Growth co-founder chairs the committee; a former Federal Reserve president sits on the board; the former CEO of the George W. Bush Presidential Center previously led the board. This layering of private equity, public policy, and philanthropic leadership creates an investment committee more typical of a mid-sized foundation or university than a K-12 school — and suggests decision-making shaped by access, not just asset allocation models.
General information
Firm type
Foundation
Year founded
1906
AUM
$200M (Altss estimate)
Location
Region
North America
Country
United States
City
Dallas
Corporate office
10600 Preston Road, Dallas, TX 75230, United States
Principals
John Rocchio
Chair of the Investment Committee
David Dini
Headmaster
Robert Kaplan
Board Trustee
Ken Hersh
Former Board President
Sector focus
Frequently asked questions
Who runs investment decisions at St. Mark's School of Texas?
The investment committee is chaired by John Rocchio, co-founder of TPG Growth. The committee operates under the school's board of trustees, which has included former Dallas Fed president Robert Kaplan and former board president Ken Hersh. Headmaster David Dini oversees the school's overall administration but does not direct investment strategy.
How is St. Mark's endowment structured compared to other independent school endowments?
The endowment maintains in-house strategic direction through its investment committee rather than outsourcing to an OCIO. This is atypical for an endowment of its estimated $200M size, where many peers rely on third-party managers for asset allocation. The committee's leadership brings direct institutional private equity experience from TPG.
Does the endowment participate in alternative investments?
The investment committee's composition strongly suggests exposure to private equity and other alternatives, though specific fund commitments are not publicly disclosed. John Rocchio's background at TPG Growth indicates comfort with illiquid, growth-oriented strategies. Real assets are partially represented through owned campus facilities.
What is the relationship between St. Mark's Fund and the endowment?
The St. Mark's Fund is the school's annual giving program, funding near-term operational and programmatic expenses. The endowment is the long-term investment pool. They are managed separately, with the annual fund not deployed as investment capital.
How did the endowment's wealth originate?
The endowment was built through multi-generational donations from prominent Dallas families and alumni. Major donors include Ross Perot Jr., Tom Hicks, and the Hill family. These gifts have also funded named campus facilities like the Hicks Gymnasium and the Albert G. Hill, Sr. Family Tennis Center.
What is the investment committee's geographic focus?
The portfolio is concentrated in United States assets, with a heavy weighting toward Texas given the committee's Dallas-based network. Physical holdings are entirely located on the school's Preston Road campus. No international investment mandates have been disclosed.
How transparent is the endowment about its holdings and performance?
St. Mark's does not publicly disclose detailed asset allocation, specific manager relationships, or performance benchmarks. The AUM figure of approximately $200M is an estimate rather than a school-published number. This opacity is typical for independent school endowments of this size.
Profile maintained by Altss using OSINT (open-source intelligence), regulatory filings, licensed data partners, and verified direct submissions. Read the methodology. Last updated: . Continuous refresh with full update cycles at least every 30 days.
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