This school numbers, among its present pupils, two children now in the fourth year of their attendance, whose father (the writer) was a member of the school more than twenty years ago, when it stood on Chauncy Street, graduating when it occupied a part of the Globe Theatre Building. He has watched with interest the growth and prosperity of the school; and he realizes, from personal observation, that while the school has seen many ways in which to enlarge and improve its educational departments, the original high standing of moral excellence has remained the same as in his boyhood.
The students are made to feel and appreciate the "traditional atmosphere" of nearly sixty years,—an atmosphere in which nothing mean or small was ever tolerated.