Belmont Hill School 
O N September 26,1923, a Country Day School for Boys will open 
| in Belmont, Massachusetts. The property, consisting of the school 
building and twenty acres of meadow and woodland, is situated 
on Prospect Street, near the junction of Park Avenue, and will have facili¬ 
ties during the first year to accommodate approximately fifty day boys, 
together with a limited number of boarding pupils. The plan contemplates 
the development of a well-composed school group. Mr. C. D. Kingsley, 
Supervisor of Secondary Schools, Massachusetts Department of Education, 
will be the consultant on matters pertaining to the plant. 
The school building, seven miles from the State House and three-quarters 
of a mile from Belmont Centre, stands three hundred feet above sea level 
and has a commanding view of Boston. The school grounds offer every 
facility for outdoor sports. The meadow lands can be easily converted into 
athletic fields, while the surrounding hills give ample opportunity for coast¬ 
ing and skiing. Spy Pond in Arlington is very accessible to the school and 
