Newton Country Day School

Newton Country Day School of the Sacred Heart
Address
785 Centre Street
Newton, (Middlesex County), Massachusetts 02458
United States
Coordinates 42°20′37″N 71°11′30″W / 42.34361°N 71.19167°W / 42.34361; -71.19167Coordinates: 42°20′37″N 71°11′30″W / 42.34361°N 71.19167°W / 42.34361; -71.19167
Information
Type Private, All-Girls
Motto "Courage and Confidence"
Religious affiliation(s) Roman Catholic
Established 1880
Headmistress Sister Barbara Rogers
Grades 512
Enrollment 400
Average class size 13
Student to teacher ratio 6:1
Campus Suburban
Color(s) Blue and Silver         
Athletics conference Eastern Independent League
Mascot Falcon
Rival Dana Hall School
Accreditation New England Association of Schools and Colleges[1]
Publication Medley (literary magazine), "The Heart" (online newspaper), Très Bien (annual magazine)
Tuition $42,000
Brother school St. Sebastian's
Website www.newtoncountryday.org

Newton Country Day School of the Sacred Heart (often abbreviated to Newton Country Day School, Newton, or NCDS) is a private, all-girls Roman Catholic high school and middle school located on the Loren Towle Estate in Newton, Massachusetts, as part of the Sacred Heart Network of 21 schools in the United States and 44 countries abroad.

History

Newton Country Day School was founded in 1880 as the Boston Academy of the Sacred Heart. It was the twentieth Sacred Heart School to open in the United States, and is a member of the international Network of Sacred Heart Schools, which spans forty-four countries and twenty-one cities in the United States. All Sacred Heart schools are associated with and live by the values of the Society of the Sacred Heart, founded by Saint Philippine Duchesne and Saint Madeleine Sophie in 1800 in Paris. Philippine brought the schools over to America in 1818.

The school was first located at 5 Chester Square in Boston's South End (now the corner of Massachusetts Avenue and Washington Street), and subsequently in four Back Bay brownstones at 260-266 Commonwealth Avenue. In December 1925 it moved to the Loren Towle Estate in Newton, where the architectural firm of Maginnis and Walsh added a chapel and a four-story school wing completed in 1928. In 1960 a gymnasium/auditorium was finished, with further additions of the Sweeney Husson building in 2002 (housing a theatre, state-of-the-art science labs, and an enlarged Middle School) and 2007 a new and greatly enlarged library.

Notable alumnae

Notes and references

  1. NEASC-CIS. "NEASC-Commission on Independent Schools". Archived from the original on June 16, 2009. Retrieved July 28, 2009.
  2. Journal, Daniel Golden Staff Reporter of The Wall Street (January 23, 2001). "Prep Schools Buff Images To Boost College Admissions". Wall Street Journal. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved August 28, 2016.
  3. 'Kelly A. Timilty-obituary,' The Boston Globe, February 1, 2012
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