A Brief History of Avon Old Farms School
USINFO | 2013-12-09 13:47

Avon Old Farms School was founded by Theodate Pope Riddle, Connecticut's first licensed female architect. Theodate's imaginative genius as an architect and her vision and determination to create a school for boys, combined with her personal wealth, made possible the founding of the school in 1927. Influenced by the Arts and Crafts movement and the ideals of the old New England farm, Theodate designed and supervised the building of her vision over a span of 10 years, from 1918-27, which cost her over $7,000,000 to complete.


 
The original stone and oak architecture is modeled after English Cotswold and Tudor styles using traditional English methods with many of the materials hewn from the school's property. The school sits upon 1,000 acres of rolling woodland, with the Farmington River to the east and picturesque Beaver Pond laying just a short walk south of the core campus. The center of campus includes a beautiful vista overlooking the Farmington Valley toward Avon Mountain.


 
In the founding years, Avon combined the best of English and American secondary school traditions with a daring and radical modern curriculum, and the school found many early successes despite facing the challenges of being a young institution. However, Mrs. Riddle, a passionate patriot and personal friend of FDR's, closed the school during World War II so it could serve as an oasis for blinded Army veterans. The Old Farms Convalescent Hospital, as it was called, gained national prominence for Mrs. Riddle's architectural masterpiece.


 
Avon re-opened as a boys' school in 1948. However, with no money, no endowment, no students, and no faculty, the institution faced major obstacles. Through the leadership of headmasters of Don Pierpont, George Trautman, and Ken LaRocque, and Board Chairmen F. Reed Estabrook Jr. '36, Peter Aron '65, Rolf Olson '59, and Dean Graham '84, in addition to the efforts and support of countless board members, alumni, parents, and friends of the school, Avon Old Farms continues to stand strong and proud as a boys' school today.


 
The school has grown from 48 boys at its opening in 1927 to a full capacity of 400 boys in grades 9-12 and postgraduates. The campus offers superb facilities, including a new student center and athletic field house as well as an NHL-quality ice hockey arena. The Ordway Science and Technology Center was completed in 2002, and the new Beatson Performing Arts Center opened in March of 2007. The school mascot is the winged beaver, which reflects the school’s motto, “Aspirando et Perseverando,” from the Latin, to aspire and to persevere.


 
As Peter Aron '65, then Board Chairman, wrote on occasion of the school's 75th anniversary, "We have filled and overflowed Mrs. Riddle's original buildings, and have continued to build. By any measure, we are very different today - academically, athletically, socially - as a reflection of a very different society. Yet certainly Mrs. Riddle would recognize her school, and I like to think that she would recognize her boys. The young men of Avon are recognizable, not just by the winged beaver on their blazers, but by their direct and friendly gaze."
 
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