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Reading Memorial High School

1954 establishments in MassachusettsHigh schools in Middlesex County, MassachusettsPublic high schools in MassachusettsReading, Massachusetts
Reading Memorial High School Aug 1 2020
Reading Memorial High School Aug 1 2020

Reading Memorial High School (RMHS), overseen by the Reading Public School district, is a four-year high school serving the town of Reading, Massachusetts, United States, as its only public grade 9-12 school. The school had a student body of 1,269 as of 2016 and draws from Reading's Parker and Coolidge Middle Schools. A major building renovation and construction project was completed prior to the 2007-08 academic year. Competing in the Middlesex League, the school's sports teams are called the Rockets. The school's administration includes principal Kevin Tracey and vice principals Jessica Theriault and Kathleen Buckley.

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

Reading Memorial High School
Oakland Road,

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Wikipedia: Reading Memorial High SchoolContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 42.534583333333 ° E -71.109083333333 °
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Address

Reading Memorial High School

Oakland Road 62
01867
Massachusetts, United States
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Phone number

call+17819448200

Website
reading.k12.ma.us

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Reading Memorial High School Aug 1 2020
Reading Memorial High School Aug 1 2020
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Nearby Places

Common Historic District (Reading, Massachusetts)
Common Historic District (Reading, Massachusetts)

The Common Historic District is a historic district encompassing the civic and institutional heart of Reading, Massachusetts. The district is centered on the town common, at the intersection of Main and Salem Streets. The common has been communally owned since at least 1737, with the original burying ground (expanded in the 19th century, and now known as Laurel Hill Cemetery) to the north. In 1769 the area's first meeting house (church and civic building) was built, giving the area a sense of identity separate from portions of Reading that would later be set off as Wakefield and North Reading. Since then the area has become a focal point for religious and civic institutions in the town.The most prominent feature of the district is the First Congregational Church, a 1913 replica of an 1817 church designed by Asher Benjamin that was destroyed by fire. The other church in the district is the stone Gothic Revival Christian Science Church on the west side of the common. The west side also includes the major municipal buildings: the library and town hall are brick Georgian Revival buildings dating to the early 20th century, as does the similarly-styled old high school building.There are also a few houses in the district, although a number of the older houses originally within its boundaries were moved to make way for some of the municipal buildings. One of the older houses is the 1817 Federal style house and shop of Thomas Pratt, located at the northeastern corner of the district. There is a row of 19th-century houses along Harnden and Salem Streets on the east side of the district. The district was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985.