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Middlesex School

Middlesex School (informally known as MX) is a coeducational, independent, and non-sectarian high school located in Concord, Middlesex County, Massachusetts. Founded in 1901 to educate the children of wealthy Boston Brahmin families, Middlesex introduced a national scholarship program in 1935 and currently educates 420 students from 32 U.S. states and 20 countries.

Middlesex School
An aerial view of Middlesex School in November 2015
Address
1400 Lowell Road

,
01742

Coordinates42°30′2″N 71°22′10″W / 42.50056°N 71.36944°W / 42.50056; -71.36944
Information
School typePrivate, independent, day and boarding, college-preparatory
MottoFides, Veritas, Labor
Established1901; 123 years ago (1901)
Head of schoolElizabeth Speers
Enrollment420
Average class size12
Student to teacher ratio4:1
Campus size350 acres (1.4 km2)
Campus typeSuburban
Color(s)Cardinal and Black   
Athletics conferenceIndependent School League
NicknameZebras
NewspaperThe Anvil
Endowment$220 million
Tuition$72,050 (boarding)
$58,350 (day) (2023-24)
Websitewww.mxschool.edu

History edit

Middlesex School was founded in 1901 by Frederick Winsor, a native of Massachusetts who had previously served as the founding headmaster of Gilman School in Baltimore.[1] He was backed by a coterie of wealthy Bostonians, including his brother Robert (the managing partner of the Kidder, Peabody investment bank), Francis Cabot Lowell, Norwood Penrose Hallowell, William Cameron Forbes, Henry Lee Higginson, and Charles Jackson Paine, the latter of whom donated the land for the school's campus.[2]

 
Eliot Hall, one of Middlesex's main administrative buildings, was named after Harvard president Charles William Eliot, an early supporter of the school.[3]

Winsor and his family played a role in the country day school movement. Middlesex masters trained by Winsor went on to establish Belmont Hill School,[4] Boston Country Day School (a predecessor of Rivers School),[5] and Fenn School[6]—three private day schools in Greater Boston. In addition, Winsor's sister Mary founded the Winsor School, an all-girls day school in Boston (though not a country day school).[7] Today, 28% of Middlesex students are day students,[8] a larger percentage than at any of the other St. Grottlesex schools.[9][10][11][12]

A former financial aid student at Harvard College,[13] Winsor introduced a regional scholarship program in 1935, which waived up to two-thirds of tuition and fees for students across the country.[14] The scholarships were explicitly modeled on the scholarship program introduced at Harvard the previous year, and sought to broaden the geographic reach of the student body.[15] Eventually, one-sixth of Middlesex students were recruited through this scholarship program.[14] Today, one-third of Middlesex students are on scholarship,[16] and the student body comes from 32 U.S. states and 20 countries.[8]

Middlesex admitted its first black students in 1964 and its first female students in 1974.[17]

Unitarianism and Harvard edit

 
Peabody House, one of the oldest buildings on campus, was donated by a prominent Unitarian family from Salem, Massachusetts.

Middlesex was founded to "meet the needs of the large body of Unitarian parents who [we]re not wholly satisfied to send their boys to the so-called [Episcopal] Church schools" like St. Paul's, St. George's, St. Mark's, and Groton.[18] (Although Groton's founder Endicott Peabody had come from an established Unitarian family, he converted to Episcopalianism in college, to his mother's dismay;[19][20] his family members donated a Middlesex dormitory.[21]) Although the school has always been nonsectarian, the founding trustees were all Unitarian,[22] and students were required to attend (nonsectarian) on-campus chapel services until the 1960s.[23] Today, Middlesex's chapel hosts secular school meetings on Wednesdays, and there are no regular religious services.[24]

Middlesex's connection to Unitarianism (and Boston's wealthy Boston Brahmin families, many of whom were Unitarians) led to a profitable relationship with Harvard University, which had been unofficially Unitarian since the "Unitarian Controversy" in the early 1800s.[25] Harvard president Charles Eliot (the namesake of a Middlesex administrative building) was an early backer of the school,[26] and Harvard dean LeBaron Russell Briggs was a founding member of the Middlesex board of trustees; both of them were Unitarians.[27] (In fact, at the time Middlesex was founded, Eliot's son Samuel was president of the American Unitarian Association.[28]) Frederick Winsor tailored the Middlesex curriculum to Harvard's entrance requirements[29] and ensured that many of the teachers were Harvard graduates.[30] In 1967, Middlesex placed more students at Harvard, Yale, and Princeton (as a percentage of the graduating class) than all but one New England boarding school.[31] However, Harvard's connection to Unitarianism eroded over time. By 1983, Unitarian Universalists comprised only 28 out of Harvard Divinity School's 380 students.[32]

Nonsectarianism and the student body edit

Middlesex is the only nonsectarian member of St. Grottlesex, an informal grouping of five schools historically associated with upper-class White Anglo-Saxon Protestant culture.[33] Its combination of Eastern Establishment prestige and religious permissiveness made it attractive to Jewish, Catholic, and Southern Baptist families who wanted their children to attend an elite boarding school, but not an Episcopalian one. The school did not build an on-campus chapel until 1925, and in the 1940s a proposal to place a Christian altar and cross in the chapel was quietly shelved.[34] (When the 1992 film School Ties was shot at Middlesex, the producers had to supply their own altar and cross, as the school did not have any.[35])

 
Warburg Library has space for 48,000 books. Frederick M. Warburg '15 chaired the Middlesex board of trustees in the 1950s.[36]

The school developed close ties with several notable Jewish families. Investment banker Jacob Schiff had previously declined to send his son Mortimer to Groton because although Groton would admit Mortimer, it would not excuse him from Sunday chapel.[37][38] Schiff's daughter married into the Warburg family, and Schiff steered his grandchildren to Middlesex.[39] The Warburgs eventually built the school library,[40] and their Rothschild relatives also patronized Middlesex.[41] (Although Schiff's business partner Otto Kahn did send his son to Groton, Kahn—unlike Schiff—was not religiously observant.[42][43])

From the beginning, Middlesex also attracted families from the American South. Due to its financial reliance on white Southern families, Middlesex was one of the last major New England boarding schools to admit black students, doing so in 1964.[44] (Middlesex had admitted its first Asian student in 1938.[45]) After rejecting Booker T. Washington's son in 1902, Frederick Winsor apologetically explained to Washington that "we have the wishes of the parents to consider as well, and we shall have boys next year from as far south as Augusta, Georgia .... Unfortunately for us, our ambition to be something more than a mere local institution[] brings us face to face with the traditions and prejudices of every section of the country."[46]

Today, 32% of Middlesex students identify as people of color[47] and 12% of Middlesex students come from abroad.[8] The current president of the board of trustees is Jason Robart, an African-American who graduated from Middlesex in 1983.[48]

Campus and facilities edit

 
Clay Centennial Center

The Middlesex School campus is located in Concord, Massachusetts, about 20 miles outside of Boston.[49] The campus was designed by the Olmsted Brothers architectural firm, and the firm Peabody and Stearns designed most of the main buildings. Most of the campus buildings are located around The Circle, a grassy field at the center of the campus.[50]

Classes are taught in Eliot Hall (the humanities building and administrative center); the Clay Centennial Center (the math and science building); and the Rachel Carson Music and Campus Center. Warburg Library contains 48,000 books, additional classroom space, and the school archives. In addition, the Bass Arts Pavilion contains two theaters, a gallery, and studio spaces for visual arts.[50]

Ware Hall houses the dining hall and student center. Middlesex offers four boys' dormitories (Clay, Landry, Robert Winsor, and Atkins) and five girls' dormitories (Bryant-Payne, Higginson, Hallowell, LeBaron Briggs, and Kravis).[50]

MIddlesex's athletic facilities include seven playing fields (five grass and two artificial turf), a wrestling room, a dance studio, a baseball diamond, eight outdoor tennis courts, eight squash courts, two basketball courts, a hockey rink, a boathouse and pond for crew, and a fitness center.[51][52]

Finances edit

Tuition and financial aid edit

Tuition and fees for the 2023-2024 academic year are $72,050 for boarding students and $58,350 for day students. 33% of the student body is on financial aid, and the average aid grant is $56,731.[16]

Endowment and expenses edit

Middlesex's financial endowment is $220 million.[8] In its Internal Revenue Service filings for the 2021-22 school year, Middlesex reported total assets of $434.6 million, net assets of $357.7 million, investment holdings of $211.2 million, and cash holdings of $16.9 million. Middlesex also reported $33.3 million in program service expenses and $7.2 million in grants (primarily student financial aid).[53]

Academics edit

Curriculum edit

Middlesex has a 4:1 student-teacher ratio, and the average class size is 12.[8] The school offers 23 Advanced Placement classes.[8]

Test scores edit

The Class of 2023's average combined SAT score was 1470 and the Class of 2022's average combined ACT score was 32.[8] In 2023, 234 students took 695 AP exams and passed 91% of them.[8]

Extracurriculars edit

Athletics edit

Middlesex fields teams in 17 different sports and competes in the Independent School League.[54] The fall sports are football, cross country, volleyball, soccer, and field hockey; the winter sports are wrestling, dance, squash, ice hockey, alpine skiing, and basketball; the spring sports are crew, lacrosse, baseball, tennis, track, and golf.[55]

Middlesex's primary athletic rival is the St. George's School in Middletown, Rhode Island.[56]

Community service edit

Middlesex offers several community service programs.[57] Students may help clean up a soup kitchen at Open Table (weekly), serve food and clean at a food pantry at Cor Unum (on long weekends), talk to people at a home for the elderly at Walden House (weekly), visit the elderly at Sunday Visits (special schedule), and help small children learn to skate at Gazebo (special schedule). Every fall, all students participate in a Community Service Day instead of going to classes. Several student Community Service Officers, all seniors, help manage the program.

Juniors may participate in the Youth in Philanthropy Program, which focuses on teaching students the techniques behind philanthropy and provides $10,000 for the students to distribute to worthy causes annually.

Every summer, the school sponsors a community service trip to the Linawo Children's Home in South Africa, where students tour the surrounding area, learn about South African culture and history, and assist in the operation of the shelter.

Notable alumni edit

References edit

  1. ^ "FREDERICK WINSOR, LONG AN EDUCATOR; Headmaster of the Middlesex School, Concord, Mass., Dies". The New York Times. 1940-11-27. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2024-03-05.
  2. ^ Fortmiller Jr., Hubert C. (2003). Find the Promise: Middlesex School, 1901-2001. Concord, MA: Middlesex School. pp. 63–106.
  3. ^ Fortmiller, p. 63.
  4. ^ "Education: Schooling". Time. 1926-02-08. ISSN 0040-781X. Retrieved 2024-03-05.
  5. ^ Fortmiller, pp. 46-47.
  6. ^ "Renee Garrelick Oral History Program -- Founding of the Fenn School. | Special Collections | Concord Free Public Library". concordlibrary.org. Retrieved 2024-03-05.
  7. ^ "History". www.winsor.edu. Retrieved 2024-03-05.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h . Middlesex School. Archived from the original on 2023-12-26. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
  9. ^ "About | St. Paul's School". www.sps.edu. 2024-02-29. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
  10. ^ "Fast Facts | Groton School". Groton School. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
  11. ^ "Day School Student Life". St. George's School. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
  12. ^ "Fast Facts - St. Mark's School". St. Mark's School. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
  13. ^ Fortmiller, pp. 20-23.
  14. ^ a b Fortmiller, pp. 331-33.
  15. ^ Winsor, Frederick (1935-02-01). "A New Idea for Private Schools". The Atlantic. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
  16. ^ a b . Middlesex School. Archived from the original on 2023-11-18. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
  17. ^ Fortmiller, pp. 324, 398.
  18. ^ Fortmiller, p. 26.
  19. ^ Kintrea, Frank (1980). ""old Peabo" And The School". AMERICAN HERITAGE. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
  20. ^ Ashburn, Frank D. (1967). Peabody of Groton (2nd ed.). Cambridge, MA: Riverside Press. pp. 36 (Peabody's cousin Clara Endicott Sears recalled that "His Mother was an ardent Unitarian and she was all upset by the Episcopal Church .... She could not understand it and she made it very hard for him.").
  21. ^ Fortmiller, p. 146.
  22. ^ Fortmiller, pp. 26-29.
  23. ^ Fortmiller, p. 58.
  24. ^ "Chapel Program". Middlesex School. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
  25. ^ Fortmiller, pp. 33-34.
  26. ^ Fortmiller, pp. 58-63.
  27. ^ Fortmiller, pp. 81-87.
  28. ^ "Eliot, Samuel A. (Samuel Atkins), 1862-1950". Harvard Library. Retrieved 2024-03-11.
  29. ^ Fortmiller, p. 172.
  30. ^ Sargent, Porter (1920). A Handbook of American Private Schools (6th ed.). Boston, MA: Porter Sargent.
  31. ^ Gordon, Michael (1969). "Changing Patterns of Upper-Class Prep School College Placements". The Pacific Sociological Review. 12 (1): 24–25. doi:10.2307/1388210. ISSN 0030-8919.
  32. ^ "$11 Million Endowment From Unitarians to Aid Div School | News | The Harvard Crimson". www.thecrimson.com. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
  33. ^ Williams, Peter W. (2016). Religion, Art, and Money: Episcopalians and American Culture from the Civil War to the Great Depression. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press. p. 218.
  34. ^ Fortmiller, pp. 283, 293.
  35. ^ Fortmiller, pp. 293-94.
  36. ^ Fortmiller, p. 129.
  37. ^ Sklare, Marshall (1968-01-01). "The Trouble with "Our Crowd"". Commentary Magazine. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
  38. ^ Ashburn, p. 192 (The Groton headmaster recalled that "The father considered the question for a week and finally concluded his son would become either a Christian or an atheist if he attended the School, so the boy was sent elsewhere. It is to be hoped the father was right....").
  39. ^ Fortmiller, pp. 131-33.
  40. ^ "Warburg Library". Middlesex School. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
  41. ^ Fortmiller, p. 132.
  42. ^ "Gilbert W. Kahn, Arts Patron And Investment Banker, Dead". The New York Times. 1975-12-16. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
  43. ^ Collins, Theresa M. (1999). "Introducing Otto H. Kahn (1867-1934)". Business and Economic History. 28 (1): 13–18. ISSN 0894-6825.
  44. ^ Fortmiller, pp. 323-24.
  45. ^ Fortmiller, p. 320.
  46. ^ Fortmiller, pp. 316-18.
  47. ^ "Middlesex School (2024 Profile) - Concord, MA". Boarding School Review. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
  48. ^ "Board of Trustees". Middlesex School. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
  49. ^ About MX
  50. ^ a b c "Middlesex School Campus Map" (PDF). Middlesex School. Retrieved 2024-03-05.
  51. ^ "Athletic Facilities". Middlesex School Athletics. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
  52. ^ "Facilities". Middlesex School Athletics. Retrieved 2024-03-06.
  53. ^ "IRS Form 990". ProPublica. Retrieved 2024-03-05.
  54. ^ ISL Member Schools
  55. ^ "Middlesex". mxschool.edu. Retrieved 17 February 2015.
  56. ^ St. George's Traditions 2012-08-15 at the Wayback Machine
  57. ^ "Community Service". mxschool.edu. Retrieved 17 February 2015.
  58. ^ "Charles C. Nast, 77, Dies; Ex-Chief of 42d Infantry". The New York Times. New York, NY. January 11, 1981. p. Section 1, Page 34 – via TimesMachine.
  59. ^ 1925 Senior Album Committee (1925). Harvard Class Album. Vol. XXXVI. Andover, MA: Andover Press. p. 220 – via Google Books.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  60. ^ "Global View Columnist Bret Stephens Wins the Pulitzer Prize for Commentary – WSJ". WSJ. 15 April 2013. Retrieved 17 February 2015.
  61. ^ Pace, Eric (September 22, 1992). "Edward Warburg, Philanthropist And Patron of the Arts, Dies at 84". The New York Times. Retrieved October 11, 2015.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Profile on Boarding School Review.com
  • Middlesex Graduates for Estabrook Homepage
  • Two Middlesex Alumnae Protest Development of Estabrook
  • Middlesex School Summer Arts Website
  • Middlesex School on Instagram. Archived from the original on ghostarchive.org
  • Middlesex School on Twitter

middlesex, school, this, article, rely, excessively, sources, closely, associated, with, subject, potentially, preventing, article, from, being, verifiable, neutral, please, help, improve, replacing, them, with, more, appropriate, citations, reliable, independ. This article may rely excessively on sources too closely associated with the subject potentially preventing the article from being verifiable and neutral Please help improve it by replacing them with more appropriate citations to reliable independent third party sources March 2024 Learn how and when to remove this message Middlesex School informally known as MX is a coeducational independent and non sectarian high school located in Concord Middlesex County Massachusetts Founded in 1901 to educate the children of wealthy Boston Brahmin families Middlesex introduced a national scholarship program in 1935 and currently educates 420 students from 32 U S states and 20 countries Middlesex SchoolAn aerial view of Middlesex School in November 2015Address1400 Lowell RoadConcord Massachusetts 01742United StatesCoordinates42 30 2 N 71 22 10 W 42 50056 N 71 36944 W 42 50056 71 36944InformationSchool typePrivate independent day and boarding college preparatoryMottoFides Veritas LaborEstablished1901 123 years ago 1901 Head of schoolElizabeth SpeersEnrollment420Average class size12Student to teacher ratio4 1Campus size350 acres 1 4 km2 Campus typeSuburbanColor s Cardinal and Black Athletics conferenceIndependent School LeagueNicknameZebrasNewspaperThe AnvilEndowment 220 millionTuition 72 050 boarding 58 350 day 2023 24 Websitewww wbr mxschool wbr edu Contents 1 History 1 1 Unitarianism and Harvard 1 2 Nonsectarianism and the student body 2 Campus and facilities 3 Finances 3 1 Tuition and financial aid 3 2 Endowment and expenses 4 Academics 4 1 Curriculum 4 2 Test scores 5 Extracurriculars 5 1 Athletics 5 2 Community service 6 Notable alumni 7 References 8 External linksHistory editMiddlesex School was founded in 1901 by Frederick Winsor a native of Massachusetts who had previously served as the founding headmaster of Gilman School in Baltimore 1 He was backed by a coterie of wealthy Bostonians including his brother Robert the managing partner of the Kidder Peabody investment bank Francis Cabot Lowell Norwood Penrose Hallowell William Cameron Forbes Henry Lee Higginson and Charles Jackson Paine the latter of whom donated the land for the school s campus 2 nbsp Eliot Hall one of Middlesex s main administrative buildings was named after Harvard president Charles William Eliot an early supporter of the school 3 Winsor and his family played a role in the country day school movement Middlesex masters trained by Winsor went on to establish Belmont Hill School 4 Boston Country Day School a predecessor of Rivers School 5 and Fenn School 6 three private day schools in Greater Boston In addition Winsor s sister Mary founded the Winsor School an all girls day school in Boston though not a country day school 7 Today 28 of Middlesex students are day students 8 a larger percentage than at any of the other St Grottlesex schools 9 10 11 12 A former financial aid student at Harvard College 13 Winsor introduced a regional scholarship program in 1935 which waived up to two thirds of tuition and fees for students across the country 14 The scholarships were explicitly modeled on the scholarship program introduced at Harvard the previous year and sought to broaden the geographic reach of the student body 15 Eventually one sixth of Middlesex students were recruited through this scholarship program 14 Today one third of Middlesex students are on scholarship 16 and the student body comes from 32 U S states and 20 countries 8 Middlesex admitted its first black students in 1964 and its first female students in 1974 17 Unitarianism and Harvard edit nbsp Peabody House one of the oldest buildings on campus was donated by a prominent Unitarian family from Salem Massachusetts Middlesex was founded to meet the needs of the large body of Unitarian parents who we re not wholly satisfied to send their boys to the so called Episcopal Church schools like St Paul s St George s St Mark s and Groton 18 Although Groton s founder Endicott Peabody had come from an established Unitarian family he converted to Episcopalianism in college to his mother s dismay 19 20 his family members donated a Middlesex dormitory 21 Although the school has always been nonsectarian the founding trustees were all Unitarian 22 and students were required to attend nonsectarian on campus chapel services until the 1960s 23 Today Middlesex s chapel hosts secular school meetings on Wednesdays and there are no regular religious services 24 Middlesex s connection to Unitarianism and Boston s wealthy Boston Brahmin families many of whom were Unitarians led to a profitable relationship with Harvard University which had been unofficially Unitarian since the Unitarian Controversy in the early 1800s 25 Harvard president Charles Eliot the namesake of a Middlesex administrative building was an early backer of the school 26 and Harvard dean LeBaron Russell Briggs was a founding member of the Middlesex board of trustees both of them were Unitarians 27 In fact at the time Middlesex was founded Eliot s son Samuel was president of the American Unitarian Association 28 Frederick Winsor tailored the Middlesex curriculum to Harvard s entrance requirements 29 and ensured that many of the teachers were Harvard graduates 30 In 1967 Middlesex placed more students at Harvard Yale and Princeton as a percentage of the graduating class than all but one New England boarding school 31 However Harvard s connection to Unitarianism eroded over time By 1983 Unitarian Universalists comprised only 28 out of Harvard Divinity School s 380 students 32 Nonsectarianism and the student body edit Middlesex is the only nonsectarian member of St Grottlesex an informal grouping of five schools historically associated with upper class White Anglo Saxon Protestant culture 33 Its combination of Eastern Establishment prestige and religious permissiveness made it attractive to Jewish Catholic and Southern Baptist families who wanted their children to attend an elite boarding school but not an Episcopalian one The school did not build an on campus chapel until 1925 and in the 1940s a proposal to place a Christian altar and cross in the chapel was quietly shelved 34 When the 1992 film School Ties was shot at Middlesex the producers had to supply their own altar and cross as the school did not have any 35 nbsp Warburg Library has space for 48 000 books Frederick M Warburg 15 chaired the Middlesex board of trustees in the 1950s 36 The school developed close ties with several notable Jewish families Investment banker Jacob Schiff had previously declined to send his son Mortimer to Groton because although Groton would admit Mortimer it would not excuse him from Sunday chapel 37 38 Schiff s daughter married into the Warburg family and Schiff steered his grandchildren to Middlesex 39 The Warburgs eventually built the school library 40 and their Rothschild relatives also patronized Middlesex 41 Although Schiff s business partner Otto Kahn did send his son to Groton Kahn unlike Schiff was not religiously observant 42 43 From the beginning Middlesex also attracted families from the American South Due to its financial reliance on white Southern families Middlesex was one of the last major New England boarding schools to admit black students doing so in 1964 44 Middlesex had admitted its first Asian student in 1938 45 After rejecting Booker T Washington s son in 1902 Frederick Winsor apologetically explained to Washington that we have the wishes of the parents to consider as well and we shall have boys next year from as far south as Augusta Georgia Unfortunately for us our ambition to be something more than a mere local institution brings us face to face with the traditions and prejudices of every section of the country 46 Today 32 of Middlesex students identify as people of color 47 and 12 of Middlesex students come from abroad 8 The current president of the board of trustees is Jason Robart an African American who graduated from Middlesex in 1983 48 Campus and facilities edit nbsp Clay Centennial Center The Middlesex School campus is located in Concord Massachusetts about 20 miles outside of Boston 49 The campus was designed by the Olmsted Brothers architectural firm and the firm Peabody and Stearns designed most of the main buildings Most of the campus buildings are located around The Circle a grassy field at the center of the campus 50 Classes are taught in Eliot Hall the humanities building and administrative center the Clay Centennial Center the math and science building and the Rachel Carson Music and Campus Center Warburg Library contains 48 000 books additional classroom space and the school archives In addition the Bass Arts Pavilion contains two theaters a gallery and studio spaces for visual arts 50 Ware Hall houses the dining hall and student center Middlesex offers four boys dormitories Clay Landry Robert Winsor and Atkins and five girls dormitories Bryant Payne Higginson Hallowell LeBaron Briggs and Kravis 50 MIddlesex s athletic facilities include seven playing fields five grass and two artificial turf a wrestling room a dance studio a baseball diamond eight outdoor tennis courts eight squash courts two basketball courts a hockey rink a boathouse and pond for crew and a fitness center 51 52 Finances editTuition and financial aid edit Tuition and fees for the 2023 2024 academic year are 72 050 for boarding students and 58 350 for day students 33 of the student body is on financial aid and the average aid grant is 56 731 16 Endowment and expenses edit Middlesex s financial endowment is 220 million 8 In its Internal Revenue Service filings for the 2021 22 school year Middlesex reported total assets of 434 6 million net assets of 357 7 million investment holdings of 211 2 million and cash holdings of 16 9 million Middlesex also reported 33 3 million in program service expenses and 7 2 million in grants primarily student financial aid 53 Academics editCurriculum edit Middlesex has a 4 1 student teacher ratio and the average class size is 12 8 The school offers 23 Advanced Placement classes 8 Test scores edit The Class of 2023 s average combined SAT score was 1470 and the Class of 2022 s average combined ACT score was 32 8 In 2023 234 students took 695 AP exams and passed 91 of them 8 Extracurriculars editAthletics edit Middlesex fields teams in 17 different sports and competes in the Independent School League 54 The fall sports are football cross country volleyball soccer and field hockey the winter sports are wrestling dance squash ice hockey alpine skiing and basketball the spring sports are crew lacrosse baseball tennis track and golf 55 Middlesex s primary athletic rival is the St George s School in Middletown Rhode Island 56 Community service edit Middlesex offers several community service programs 57 Students may help clean up a soup kitchen at Open Table weekly serve food and clean at a food pantry at Cor Unum on long weekends talk to people at a home for the elderly at Walden House weekly visit the elderly at Sunday Visits special schedule and help small children learn to skate at Gazebo special schedule Every fall all students participate in a Community Service Day instead of going to classes Several student Community Service Officers all seniors help manage the program Juniors may participate in the Youth in Philanthropy Program which focuses on teaching students the techniques behind philanthropy and provides 10 000 for the students to distribute to worthy causes annually Every summer the school sponsors a community service trip to the Linawo Children s Home in South Africa where students tour the surrounding area learn about South African culture and history and assist in the operation of the shelter Notable alumni editConrad Aiken Pulitzer Prize winning author and poet Paget Brewster actress citation needed Steve Carell actor and comedian Joseph S Clark Jr former U S Senator from Pennsylvania and mayor of Philadelphia James L Halperin numismatist and author William Hurt Academy Award winning actor Joseph Kahn Managing editor The New York Times citation needed Mark P Lagon American political scientist and human rights campaigner citation needed Mills Lane Nevada Judge D A TV personality professional boxing referee Henry Cabot Lodge Jr former U S Senator from Massachusetts and 1960 Republican vice presidential nominee Robin Moore writer Charles Coudert Nast attorney and U S Army major general 58 59 Bill Richardson former Governor of New Mexico and U S ambassador to the United Nations Bret Stephens Op ed columnist The New York Times 60 Cass Sunstein former head of President Obama s Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs Robert Walmsley University Professor at Harvard Law School columnist at Bloomberg Opinion Robert Egerton Swartwout author Kevin Systrom founder of Instagram Shunsuke Tsurumi Japanese philosopher Jessica Tuck actress Chris Van Hollen senator from Maryland Edward Warburg 1908 1992 philanthropist patron of the arts 61 Frederick M Warburg investment banker Paul F Warburg investment banker William Weld former Governor of Massachusetts vice presidential candidateReferences edit FREDERICK WINSOR LONG AN EDUCATOR Headmaster of the Middlesex School Concord Mass Dies The New York Times 1940 11 27 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2024 03 05 Fortmiller Jr Hubert C 2003 Find the Promise Middlesex School 1901 2001 Concord MA Middlesex School pp 63 106 Fortmiller p 63 Education Schooling Time 1926 02 08 ISSN 0040 781X Retrieved 2024 03 05 Fortmiller pp 46 47 Renee Garrelick Oral History Program Founding of the Fenn School Special Collections Concord Free Public Library concordlibrary org Retrieved 2024 03 05 History www winsor edu Retrieved 2024 03 05 a b c d e f g h Facts and Figures Middlesex School Archived from the original on 2023 12 26 Retrieved 2024 03 06 About St Paul s School www sps edu 2024 02 29 Retrieved 2024 03 06 Fast Facts Groton School Groton School Retrieved 2024 03 06 Day School Student Life St George s School Retrieved 2024 03 06 Fast Facts St Mark s School St Mark s School Retrieved 2024 03 06 Fortmiller pp 20 23 a b Fortmiller pp 331 33 Winsor Frederick 1935 02 01 A New Idea for Private Schools The Atlantic Retrieved 2024 03 06 a b Affording Middlesex Middlesex School Archived from the original on 2023 11 18 Retrieved 2024 03 06 Fortmiller pp 324 398 Fortmiller p 26 Kintrea Frank 1980 old Peabo And The School AMERICAN HERITAGE Retrieved 2024 03 06 Ashburn Frank D 1967 Peabody of Groton 2nd ed Cambridge MA Riverside Press pp 36 Peabody s cousin Clara Endicott Sears recalled that His Mother was an ardent Unitarian and she was all upset by the Episcopal Church She could not understand it and she made it very hard for him Fortmiller p 146 Fortmiller pp 26 29 Fortmiller p 58 Chapel Program Middlesex School Retrieved 2024 03 06 Fortmiller pp 33 34 Fortmiller pp 58 63 Fortmiller pp 81 87 Eliot Samuel A Samuel Atkins 1862 1950 Harvard Library Retrieved 2024 03 11 Fortmiller p 172 Sargent Porter 1920 A Handbook of American Private Schools 6th ed Boston MA Porter Sargent Gordon Michael 1969 Changing Patterns of Upper Class Prep School College Placements The Pacific Sociological Review 12 1 24 25 doi 10 2307 1388210 ISSN 0030 8919 11 Million Endowment From Unitarians to Aid Div School News The Harvard Crimson www thecrimson com Retrieved 2024 03 06 Williams Peter W 2016 Religion Art and Money Episcopalians and American Culture from the Civil War to the Great Depression Chapel Hill NC University of North Carolina Press p 218 Fortmiller pp 283 293 Fortmiller pp 293 94 Fortmiller p 129 Sklare Marshall 1968 01 01 The Trouble with Our Crowd Commentary Magazine Retrieved 2024 03 06 Ashburn p 192 The Groton headmaster recalled that The father considered the question for a week and finally concluded his son would become either a Christian or an atheist if he attended the School so the boy was sent elsewhere It is to be hoped the father was right Fortmiller pp 131 33 Warburg Library Middlesex School Retrieved 2024 03 06 Fortmiller p 132 Gilbert W Kahn Arts Patron And Investment Banker Dead The New York Times 1975 12 16 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2024 03 06 Collins Theresa M 1999 Introducing Otto H Kahn 1867 1934 Business and Economic History 28 1 13 18 ISSN 0894 6825 Fortmiller pp 323 24 Fortmiller p 320 Fortmiller pp 316 18 Middlesex School 2024 Profile Concord MA Boarding School Review Retrieved 2024 03 06 Board of Trustees Middlesex School Retrieved 2024 03 06 About MX a b c Middlesex School Campus Map PDF Middlesex School Retrieved 2024 03 05 Athletic Facilities Middlesex School Athletics Retrieved 2024 03 06 Facilities Middlesex School Athletics Retrieved 2024 03 06 IRS Form 990 ProPublica Retrieved 2024 03 05 ISL Member Schools Middlesex mxschool edu Retrieved 17 February 2015 St George s Traditions Archived 2012 08 15 at the Wayback Machine Community Service mxschool edu Retrieved 17 February 2015 Charles C Nast 77 Dies Ex Chief of 42d Infantry The New York Times New York NY January 11 1981 p Section 1 Page 34 via TimesMachine 1925 Senior Album Committee 1925 Harvard Class Album Vol XXXVI Andover MA Andover Press p 220 via Google Books a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Global View Columnist Bret Stephens Wins the Pulitzer Prize for Commentary WSJ WSJ 15 April 2013 Retrieved 17 February 2015 Pace Eric September 22 1992 Edward Warburg Philanthropist And Patron of the Arts Dies at 84 The New York Times Retrieved October 11 2015 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Middlesex School Official website Profile on Boarding School Review com Middlesex Graduates for Estabrook Homepage Two Middlesex Alumnae Protest Development of Estabrook Middlesex School Summer Arts Website Middlesex School on Instagram Archived from the original on ghostarchive org Middlesex School on Twitter Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Middlesex School amp oldid 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