South Kent School, a private all-boys boarding school in South Kent, Connecticut, United States, is located on a campus in western Litchfield County. It is sited on Spooner Hill east of Bull's Bridge, overlooking the former Housatonic Valley rail-line, Hatch Pond, and the 'whistle-stop' South Kent station, and is itself overlooked by Bull Mountain.
The school has an operating budget of approximately $14 million and a staff of less than 100. From its inception, South Kent School was intended to offer a service-oriented education "at minimum cost for boys of ability and character, who presumably on graduation must be self-supporting. " Its motto is "Simplicity of life, Self-reliance, and Directness of purpose".
The hamlet of South Kent emerged in the mid-1700s on the "main road over Spooner Hill to Bull's Bridge", where Jacob Bull established an iron foundry; by 1800, an ironworks and forge were also set up near the outlet from Hatch Pond. When railroads came up the valley in the 1840s, efficient competition from western foundries shuttered the Connecticut iron industry. By 1920, the Kent area's population was half its Revolution-era level, and farm properties were available inexpensively.
The school was founded in 1923 as a joint venture between Reverend Frederick Herbert Sill, headmaster of Kent School, and two of his recent graduates, Samuel Slater Bartlett and Richard M. Cuyler. The Straight farm was purchased from members of the Judd family, and additions to the farmhouse were made to house a chapel, twenty-four students, and faculty. From the start, students provided labor for daily cleaning, occasional farm chores, maintenance, and unskilled construction. Over the years, buildings were added to the Straight property (dormitories, classrooms, a chapel, a library, an infirmary, faculty residences, &c.) and additional acreage was acquired. Most recently, the school purchased the defunct Arno farm on the Barnabus Hatch (d.1781) property at the north end of Hatch Pond, and is operating it as an educational farm.
Sam Bartlett became the first headmaster, serving for 45 years. Bartlett was followed as headmaster by conservationist L. Wynne Wister (1955âÂÂ69), then George M. Bartlett (son of the first headmaster) through 1989. Peter Arango had a brief tenure, then Noble Richards '49 was headmaster until 1996. He was succeeded by John S. Farber (96âÂÂ00), John C. Farr '58 (retired in 2003), then by Andrew J. Vadnais through 2018, then followed by Lawrence A. Smith '73. An independent board of trustees governs the school. South Kent School's most current head of school is Brian D. Sullivan.
Enrollment at the beginning of the 2025-26 school year was 165 young men worldwide in four "forms" (or grades). International students from twenty nations and U.S. students from nineteen states across America are represented.
South Kent is a college-preparatory school; the course of study is designed with the intent that every student will continue his education at a higher-level institution.
In 2017âÂÂ18, the school had 35 faculty members who offered 48 courses in 2 primary divisions: math/science and humanities. The school year is divided into fall, winter, and spring. Students typically enroll in five major academic courses each term. Accelerated courses, including advanced placement, are offered in more than a dozen subjects (several in conjunction with Syracuse University).
ESL is a program for international students to improve or reinforce their written and oral English skills. The focus is on structure, comprehension, and conversation. Nearly half of South Kent graduates have been non-native English speakers in recent years.
Due in part to its rural setting, the school has established a learning track focused on environmental management and entrepreneurship. Technologies range from historic architecture and building techniques to robotics and software design.
Facilities available to students include The Admiral James & Sybil Stockdale Arena for hockey, the Joseph J. Brown gymnasium, the Alumni Boathouse on Hatch Pond for rowing, the Anne H. Funnell cross-country trail, the hard court tennis courts, a weight-training facility, numerous athletics fields, and the adjacent Tom Fazio-designed Bulls Bridge Golf Club.
For over one hundred years, the school has been home to slightly more 3,500 students, resident faculty and their families, and several other notables.
Father Sill wrote in his proposal for the founding of Kent School that it would " provide...for boys of ability and character, who presumably on graduation must be self-supporting...Simplicity, self-reliance and directness...." Seventeen years later, he and his partners in the South Kent venture adopted the final phrase as the new school's motto.
In the early 2000s, Headmaster Vadnais and the Board recognized that young athletes with professional aspirations fit Father Sill's description, and many were likely to see high school as their final educational endeavor. The number of notable athletes who have graduated from South Kent has burgeoned during the 21st century. Alumni athletes who have proven outstanding include:
Several notable athletes attended South Kent but graduated elsewhere; among them Nik Stauskas, Dion Waiters, Tremont Waters, and Andrew Peeke.
South Kent School is accredited by the New England Association of Schools and Colleges and has held membership in District III of the Cum Laude Society for more than eighty years.
South Kent competes athletically as a member of the New England Preparatory School Athletic Council and the Hudson Valley Athletic League and adheres to all league guidelines. Students can participate in post-season tournaments and compete for league and New England titles.
The school also maintains membership in the National Association of Independent Schools, the National Association of Episcopal Schools, the Secondary School Admission Test Board, the Connecticut Association of Independent Schools, The Association of Boarding Schools, the International Coalition of Boys Schools and the National Association for College Admission Counseling.