History and Mission
Bement's Mission
The Bement School provides an education based on time-honored school traditions and values for children in kindergarten through ninth grade, day and boarding. From the classrooms to the dorms, we live and learn as a family, while encouraging responsibility for our own work and actions. Bement actively seeks an academically diverse, international, and multi-cultural student body. Students and adults at Bement work together to create a climate of acceptance and kindness.
Bement's History
The Bement School began in 1925 when Grace "Menty" Bement agreed to a request
of Headmaster Frank Boyden of Deerfield Academy that she tutor one of his students.
The school grew as word spread. Menty's emphasis was on the individual child-a
revolutionary approach in those days. But the rights of the individual included
a strong emphasis on the responsibility for the rights of others. The campus
began to expand outward from Bement House. "The Barn" was renovated first to
be a place for social gatherings and later to house drama and the arts. A stable
was converted into Keith Schoolhouse. In 1930 the school acquired Barton House
to establish a boarding department. Snively House, the site of today's alumni/ae
and development office, was moved from the town of Dana when it was flooded to
form the Quabbin Reservoir. Menty retired from the school at age 67. In 1947 Katharine "Kay" Bartlett and Mary "Gug" Drexler
bought the school from Menty and incorporated it a few years later. During the
next two decades Kay and Gug continued to build upon Menty's philosophies. They
bought Wright House at the north end of town and acquired Stebbins House,
which, along with Wright House, would become dormitories for older boarders.
In 1967 they initiated a fund drive that led to the construction of the Polk
Building. Kay and Gug retired in 1971 and were followed by Charles Hamilton,
John Butler in 1974, and Peter Drake, in 1985. A capital campaign funded the
construction in 1991 of the new Drake Building for grades 2-5. A fine arts wing, completed in the fall
of 1992, expanded the Barn for theatre and physical education, along with adding art and
music rooms. Our current Head, Shelley Jackson, came to Bement in 1999.
A capital campaign, launched the same year, provided a new upper school
facility, the Kittredge Building, complete with eleven classrooms, two science
labs, school meeting space, and locker rooms. In the same campaign, the Polk
Building was renovated to provide the school with its first all-school library,
named in honor of the Clagett/McLennan families. The Polk Building now features
the Haas and Flynt Computer Rooms, a multi-purpose dance studio, and a reading
room dedicated to Grace Bement's love of literature. Bement's curriculum has
remained responsive and fluid, and faculty continue to demonstrate unflagging
devotion to their students. Bement
currently maintains an enrollment of approximately 240 students, including 30
boarders, who come from many different states and countries.
It is unlikely that Menty envisioned
the Bement School that exists today. However, she would undoubtedly
be pleased with the nurturing philosophy that has been retained,
along with the continuing commitment to assisting students
in reaching their personal and academic potential.
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