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Newton Country Day School

Coordinates:42°20′37″N71°11′30″W / 42.34361°N 71.19167°W /42.34361; -71.19167
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Private girls school in Newton, Massachusetts

Newton Country Day School of the Sacred Heart
Address
Map
785 Centre Street

,,
02458

United States
Coordinates42°20′37″N71°11′30″W / 42.34361°N 71.19167°W /42.34361; -71.19167
Information
TypePrivate,All-Girls
Motto"Courage and Confidence"
Religious affiliation(s)Roman Catholic
Established1880
Head of schoolJessica Hooper
Grades512
Enrollment400
Average class size13
Student to teacher ratio6:1
CampusSuburban
Color(s)Blue andSilver  
AthleticsBasketball, Crew, Cross Country, Dance, Field Hockey, Golf, Ice Hockey, Lacrosse, Sailing, Soccer, Softball, Squash, Tennis, Volleyball
Athletics conferenceEastern Independent League
MascotFalcon
RivalDana Hall School
AccreditationNew England Association of Schools and Colleges[1]
PublicationMedley (literary magazine), "The Heart" (online newspaper), Très Bien (annual magazine)
Tuition$62,200
Brother schoolSt. Sebastian's
Websitewww.newtoncountryday.org
Wikimedia Commons has media related toNewton Country Day School.

Newton Country Day School of the Sacred Heart (often abbreviated to Newton Country Day School, Newton, or NCDS) is aprivate, all-girlsRoman Catholichigh school andmiddle school located on theLoren Towle Estate inNewton, Massachusetts, as part of the Sacred Heart Network of 21 schools in the United States and 44 countries abroad.

History

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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 internationalNetwork of Sacred Heart Schools, which spans forty-four countries and twenty-one cities in theUnited States. All Sacred Heart schools are associated with and live by the values of theSociety of the Sacred Heart, founded bySaint Madeleine Sophie Barat in 1800 in Paris.Saint Rose Philippine Duchesne established the first foundation of the Society of the Sacred Heart in Missouri in 1818, beginning Sacred Heart education in the Americas.[2]

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 theLoren Towle Estate in Newton, where the architectural firm ofMaginnis 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 and 2007 a new and greatly enlarged library. In 2016 the Kathleen R. Martin Wellness Center was opened and blessed by Cardinal Seán Patrick O’Malley, OFM Cap., Archbishop of Boston on April 26 of that year. The Martin Center is a 50,000-square-foot building for dance, athletics, fitness, and wellness. Some key features are two full volleyball and basketball courts, squash courts, a fitness space, an erg room, a dance studio, an athletic training room, and a wellness classroom.

As part of the Sacred Heart Network, NCDS follows the five Goals and Criteria of Sacred Heart Schools. The five goals help express the intentions and hopes of the Sacred Heart 200-year tradition. The school's culture and identity are based on the vision set forth from the goals. Once a student graduates these goals have hopefully become a form of wisdom and strength from which they can draw on throughout their lives.

  • Goal I: Schools of the Sacred Heart commit themselves to educate to a personal and active faith in God.
  • Goal II: Schools of the Sacred Heart commit themselves to educate to a deep respect for intellectual values.
  • Goal III: Schools of the Sacred Heart commit themselves to educate to a social awareness which impels to action.
  • Goal IV: Schools of the Sacred Heart commit themselves to educate to the building of community as a Christian value.
  • Goal V: Schools of the Sacred Heart commit themselves to educate to personal growth in an atmosphere of wise freedom.

Notable alumnae

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Notes and references

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  1. ^NEASC-CIS."NEASC-Commission on Independent Schools". Archived fromthe original on June 16, 2009. RetrievedJuly 28, 2009.
  2. ^Philippine Duchesne: Frontier Missionary of the Sacred Heart by Louise Callan, RSCJ, 1957
  3. ^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. RetrievedAugust 28, 2016.
  4. ^'Kelly A. Timilty-obituary,'The Boston Globe, February 1, 2012

External links

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Ordinaries
Churches
List
List of churches in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston
Cathedral
Cathedral of the Holy Cross
Basilicas and shrines
Basilica and Shrine of Our Lady of Perpetual Help, Boston
St. Anthony Shrine, Boston
St. Clement Eucharistic Shrine, Boston
Our Lady of Good Voyage, the Seaport Shrine
Parishes
Holy Name, West Roxbury
Holy Trinity, Lowell
Our Lady of Czestochowa, Boston
Our Lady of Good Voyage, Gloucester
Our Lady Help of Christians, Newton
Sacred Heart, Cambridge
St. Albert the Great, Weymouth
St. Charles Borromeo, Waltham
St. John the Baptist, Salem
St. John the Evangelist, Cambridge
St. Joseph, Boston
St. Leonard, Boston
St. Mary, Dedham (History)
St. Mary, Milton
St. Mary, Newton
St. Mary, Waltham
St. Mary, Winchester
St. Mary - St. Catherine of Siena, Charlestown
St. Paul, Cambridge
St. Stanislaus Bishop & Martyr, Chelsea
St. Susanna, Dedham
Former parishes
Holy Cross, Boston
Our Lady of Mount Carmel, East Boston
St. Aidan, Brookline
St. Catherine of Sienna, Charlestown
St. Joseph, Roxbury
St. Mary, Charlestown
St. Stephen, Boston
Education
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Pope St. John XXIII National Seminary
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Closed
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High schools
Academy of Notre Dame, Tyngsboro
Arlington Catholic High School, Arlington
Austin Preparatory School, Reading
Bishop Fenwick High School, Peabody
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Cathedral High School, Boston
Catholic Memorial School, West Roxbury
Central Catholic High School, Lawrence
Cristo Rey Boston High School, Dorchester
Fontbonne Academy, Milton
Lowell Catholic High School, Lowell
Malden Catholic High School, Malden
Newton Country Day School, Newton
Notre Dame Academy, Hingham
Notre Dame High School, Lawrence
St. John's Preparatory School, Danvers
St. Mary's High School, Lynn
Saint Sebastian's School, Needham
Ursuline Academy, Dedham
Xaverian Brothers High School, Westwood
Closed
Cambridge Matignon School, Cambridge
Don Bosco Technical High School, Boston
Elizabeth Seton Academy, Boston
Hudson Catholic High School, Hudson
Marian High School, Framingham
Mount Alvernia High School, Newton
Nazareth Academy, Wakefield
Our Lady of Nazareth Academy, Wakefield
Pope John XXIII High School, Everett
Presentation of Mary Academy, Methuen
Sacred Heart High School, Kingston
Saint Clement High School, Medford
Saint Joseph Preparatory High School, Boston
St. Dominic Savio Preparatory High School, Boston
Trinity Catholic High School, Newton
Former
Archbishop Williams High School, Braintree
Cardinal Spellman High School, Brockton
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Girls' schools in Massachusetts
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Connecticut
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