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Powers Music School

Belmont, MassachusettsEducation in BostonMusic schools in Massachusetts
Powers Music School, April 2010, Belmont MA
Powers Music School, April 2010, Belmont MA

Powers Music School is a musical institution serving New England for more than 50 years. Powers Music School is a community music center based in Belmont, Massachusetts. The School provides private music lessons, early childhood and group classes, ensembles, orchestra, theory, music therapy, and performance opportunities to over 1000 students throughout Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Rhode Island.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Powers Music School (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Powers Music School
Concord Avenue,

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Wikipedia: Powers Music SchoolContinue reading on Wikipedia

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Latitude Longitude
N 42.395305555556 ° E -71.174611111111 °
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Powers Music School

Concord Avenue 396
02478
Massachusetts, United States
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Powers Music School, April 2010, Belmont MA
Powers Music School, April 2010, Belmont MA
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Nearby Places

Clay Pit Pond
Clay Pit Pond

Clay Pit Pond, also known as Claypit Pond, is a pond in the Boston suburb of Belmont in Middlesex County, Massachusetts situated between Concord Avenue and Belmont High School. It is a man-made pond, excavated as the source of clay for industrial brick-making on the site from 1888 to 1926. The pond was formed in 1933 when the Wellington Brook was redirected to flood the site, making it an essential part of the drainage system for much of Belmont. The Parry Brothers first opened a brickyard in the vicinity of the current pond in 1888. In 1900, nearly all brick making operations in Middlesex County were merged into the New England Brick Company, which acquired the site and increased production to 15 million bricks per year with a work force of 75. By 1926, the highest quality clay was exhausted and the site was abandoned, reportedly leaving behind an 1884 Marion steam shovel at the bottom of the pit. The pond is inhabited by bluegill, common carp, and largemouth bass, among other species. The Town of Belmont purchased the abandoned pit in 1927 for $22,500 to use as a waste dump site. However, in 1933, the Town diverted the Wellington Brook through a culvert to flood the site with 80 million gallons of water, creating the Clay Pit Pond.In March 2010, the pond overflowed onto the road after two days of rain, closing down the adjacent high school.In September 2020, several Belmont citizens illegally removed more than 80 trees and shrubs from the south side of Clay Pit Pond. The unauthorized deforestation of this protected wetland area has raised environmental concerns.