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Noble and Greenough School

1866 establishments in MassachusettsBoarding schools in MassachusettsCo-educational boarding schoolsEducational institutions established in 1866Independent School League
Private high schools in MassachusettsPrivate middle schools in MassachusettsPrivate preparatory schools in MassachusettsSchools in Dedham, Massachusetts

The Noble and Greenough School, commonly known as Nobles, is a coeducational, nonsectarian day and five-day boarding school for students spanning from grades seven through twelve. The campus is near Boston on a 187-acre (0.76 km2) campus that borders the Charles River in Dedham, Massachusetts. The current enrollment of 614 students includes a balance of boys and girls.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Noble and Greenough School (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Noble and Greenough School
Campus Drive,

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N 42.261111111111 ° E -71.185555555556 °
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Putnam Library and Academic Center

Campus Drive 10
02026
Massachusetts, United States
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St. Susanna Church (Dedham, Massachusetts)

St. Susanna Church is a Roman Catholic parish of the Archdiocese of Boston located in Dedham, Massachusetts. The pastor is Father Stephen S. Josoma, and Laurence J. Bloom is the deacon. It is known as "one of the most liberal parishes in the Archdiocese of Boston."The parish was founded in 1960 due to overcrowding at St. Mary of the Assumption Church in Dedham. By the 1930s St. Mary's was one of the biggest parishes in the Archdiocese with over 6,000 parishioners and 1,300 students in Sunday School. During the middle of that decade there were four priests and six nuns ministering to the congregation.In the 1950s it became clear that a second parish was needed in Dedham, and so St. Susanna's was established in February 1960 to serve the needs of the Riverdale neighborhood. When St. Susanna's opened it had 300 families, while 2,500 stayed at St. Mary's.During construction, masses were held at Moseley's on the Charles. The first pastor of St. Susana's, Father Michael Durant, lived at St. Mary's while his church was being constructed. The first mass was said in the new church on February 11, 1962. The church was named by Cardinal Richard Cushing after his titular church, Santa Susanna, in Rome.In 2000, average attendance at Sunday mass was 1,671, making it the 63rd most active parish out of the 357 parishes then in the archdiocese. It performed the 314th most sacraments in 2001–2002.The parish garnered the attention of national media during Advent 2018 when the Nativity scene outside of the church showed the Baby Jesus in a cage and the three wise men separated from the others by a fence labeled "deportation." The scene was a statement on the Trump administration family separation policy and on the condition of refugees more generally.