Rivers School

Prep school in Weston, Massachusetts, US From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Rivers School is an independent, coeducational preparatory school in Weston, Massachusetts.

Coordinates42°19′23″N 71°19′34″W
Former names
  • Country Day School for Boys of Boston
  • Rivers Country Day School
TypeIndependent, Day
MottoExcellence with Humanity
Quick facts The Rivers School, Location ...
The Rivers School
Location
333 Winter Street

,
02493

United States
Coordinates42°19′23″N 71°19′34″W
Information
Former names
  • Country Day School for Boys of Boston
  • Rivers Country Day School
TypeIndependent, Day
MottoExcellence with Humanity
Established1915; 111 years ago (1915)
FounderRobert W. Rivers
Head of schoolRyan S. Dahlem
Teaching staff74.8 (FTE) (2015–16)[1]
Grades6-12
GenderCoeducational
Enrollment536 (2025-26)
Average class size11 students
Student to teacher ratio6:1
Campus size55 acres
Campus typeSuburban
Athletics conferenceIndependent School League
MascotRedwing
Teams58 (Varsity, JV, Thirds, and Middle School)
Team nameRedwings
PublicationRiparian
NewspaperThe Rivers Edge
Endowment$48.8 million (June 30, 2025)
Tuition$66,140 (2025-26)
Websitewww.rivers.org
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History

Rivers School was founded in 1915 as an educational institution for boys in Brookline, Massachusetts. Robert W. Rivers founded the school and was its first headmaster. The Country Day School for Boys of Boston merged with Rivers in 1940, and the school moved to its present location in Weston in 1960. It became co-educational in 1989.[2]

The Rivers School Conservatory

Logo of the Rivers School Conservatory

The Rivers School Conservatory was founded in 1975 by Ethel Bernard, one of the pioneers of the music school movement. She approached Rivers School with the idea of using the then-unoccupied former headmaster's house on the campus (now called Blackwell House after George H. Blackwell).[3]

It was first called the Music School at Rivers, then Rivers School Conservatory. In 1978, the Annual Seminar on Contemporary Music for the Young was established,[4] with guests including John Cage (1983). All pieces performed are composed in the 25-years prior to each seminar. Recent examples include Matinee: The Fantom of the Fair by Libby Larsen.[5][6]

The Conservatory currently has more than 750 students, including a student orchestra program, jazz and chamber ensembles, music theory and composition, a marimba program,[7][8][9] choruses, master classes, workshops, and private lessons for instruments, piano, and voice.[3]

Clubs and co-curriculars

Notable alumni

References

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