Lenox School for Boys

Lenox School
Motto Non Ministrari sed Ministrare ("Not to be served but to serve")
Established 1926 (closed 1972)
Type Private secondary school, boarding and day students
Affiliation Episcopal
Headmaster Rev. G. Gardner Monks (1926-1946), Rev. Robert L. Curry (1946-1972)
Students 250
Grades 9-12
Location Lenox, Massachusetts, Massachusetts, U.S.
Coordinates 42°20′58″N 73°16′59″W / 42.34944°N 73.28306°W
Campus Rural

Lenox School was a private preparatory school for students in grades nine through twelve in Lenox, Massachusetts. The school was affiliated with the Protestant Episcopal Church.

School history

The school opened in 1926 under the leadership of Rev. G. Gardner Monks, the school's first headmaster. In 1946 the Rev. Robert L. Curry, D.D. became the second and longest serving headmaster, leaving in 1969. Over the years Lenox's enrollment ranged from 150 to 250 boys with about 32 teachers or masters. The school was modeled on the English public school system and instead of grades to designate classes, the term 'forms' was used. Third Form referred to the freshman year through the Sixth Form for the senior year. The school used a system of 'prefects' who were members of the Sixth Form and were elected by the senior class or appointed by the headmaster. There were two Senior Prefects.

It was primarily a residential boarding school, with some day students commuting from the surrounding region of the central Berkshire Hills. The church influence was felt through a number of Episcopal clergy faculty members, required sacred studies classes and a daily chapel service at Trinity Episcopal Church. In addition to strong academic standards, the school was notable for its sports teams. The motto of the school was Non Ministrari-Sed Ministrare; "not to be ministered unto but to minister" or more commonly translated as "not to be served but to serve".[1]

Eventually, financial problems led to the school's closure. A 1972 merger with the Bordentown Military Institute was an uncomfortable alliance between two disparate school cultures. By the following school year, the combined entity was closed, as the Vietnam War had reduced the popularity of a military education.[2] The fate of the school was not unique among private secondary schools in the central Berkshires. By the mid-1970s neighboring Foxhollow School, Windsor Mountain School, Cranwell Preparatory School (Jesuit) and Stockbridge School had all closed. Like Lenox School, these were small boarding schools serving students from throughout the northeast and sometimes beyond, occupying campuses that were once grand estates established during the Gilded Age in the Berkshires.

The core of the school's campus is now the site of Shakespeare & Company. In spite of four decades passing since the closure of Lenox School for Boys, student loyalty is reflected in an active alumni organization that produces a quarterly newsletter and convenes an annual Fall reunion in Lenox.

Notable alumni

References

  1. The Lenox School Campus Today; logo. Retrieved 2010-11-10.
  2. "Bordentown Military Institute Alumni Association". Bordentown Military Institute Alumni Association. Retrieved 2010-11-10.
  3. "Kirk Scharfenberg, 48; Editor on Boston Globe", The New York Times, July 29, 1992. Retrieved 2010-11-10.
  4. Wooden Boats: In Pursuit of the Perfect Craft at an American Boatyard page 75, Retrieved 2013-03-20
  5. McKinley, Jesse, "Lucien Hold; early champion of top comics; 57", New York Times News Service via San Diego Union Tribune, December 8, 2004. Retrieved 2010-11-10.
  6. William Earnshaw faculty page for Wellcome Trust at University of Edinburgh Retrieved 2013-04-04.

External links