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Medford High School (Massachusetts)

AC with 0 elementsPublic high schools in MassachusettsSchools in Middlesex County, MassachusettsUse American English from December 2022Use mdy dates from December 2022
Medford High School, Medford MA
Medford High School, Medford MA

Medford High School is a public high school located in the western edge of the Lawrence Estates section of Medford, Massachusetts on the southwest border of the Middlesex Fells Reservation. Students in the City of Medford may also attend the Medford Vocational-Technical High School on the same site, or the Curtis/Tufts alternative high school in South Medford.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Medford High School (Massachusetts) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Medford High School (Massachusetts)
Winthrop Street,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 42.430027777778 ° E -71.125055555556 °
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Address

Medford High School

Winthrop Street 489
02155
Massachusetts, United States
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Phone number

call7813932301

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Medford High School, Medford MA
Medford High School, Medford MA
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Nearby Places

Grace Episcopal Church (Medford, Massachusetts)
Grace Episcopal Church (Medford, Massachusetts)

The Grace Episcopal Church is an Episcopal church designed by noted American architect H. H. Richardson, with a major stained glass window by John LaFarge. It is located at 160 High Street, Medford, Massachusetts and now listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The church was constructed 1867-1869. It is one of Richardson's earliest works and the second of his churches (now the earliest remaining since his Unity Church, Springfield, has been demolished). Its cornerstone was laid in 1867 but by August 1868 it was evident that construction costs would exceed the budget. After the Brooks family covered the remaining construction costs, it became a private chapel under Episcopal law. In 1873 the family delivered the church to the parish, and it then was consecrated by the Bishop of Maine. The church is designed in a picturesque Gothic style with 90-foot (27 m) high steeple (square base, octagonal spire), asymmetrical massing, and rough-cut walls of glacial boulder with granite trim. A massive slate roof, in gray with bands of red slate, dominates the nave's low walls and the five-sided apse attached to its east wall. The church has undergone extensive modifications from its original design. In 1882 a Sunday school annex was appended, in 1883 the nave interior was redecorated, and in 1957 further additions were made. In 1962 the chancel was reworked and Richardson's original altar given to the Brooklyn Museum. In the early 1970s Richardson's dark-stained interior was replaced by a brighter woodwork. As of 2007 only the pulpit remains of his original interior. LaFarge's window, "Rebecca at the Well", forms the center of the nave's south wall, and was probably installed in 1884 or 1885.