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Kent Denver School

Kent Denver School
Kent Denver.svg
Location
4000 East Quincy Avenue
Cherry Hills Village, CO 80113-4916

United States
Coordinates 39°38′02″N 104°56′25″W / 39.63396°N 104.94032°W / 39.63396; -104.94032Coordinates: 39°38′02″N 104°56′25″W / 39.63396°N 104.94032°W / 39.63396; -104.94032
Information
Type College preparatory
Motto Excellence in scholarship and character
Established 1922
President Kevin Duncan
Head of school Dr. Randal Harrington
Upper School Head Dr. Eric Chandler
Middle School Head John Kuntz
Grades 6-12
Enrollment 685 (222 in the middle school and 463 in the upper school)
Campus size 200 acres (81 ha)
Color(s) Navy, scarlet, white
Athletics 3A
Athletics conference Metropolitan League
Mascot Sun Devil
Information 303-770-7660
Website

Kent Denver School is a private, co-educational, non-sectarian college preparatory high school and middle school in Cherry Hills Village, Colorado. It traces its origin back to the 1922 founding of the Kent School for Girls and has existed as a co-educational institution since 1974.

The Kent School for Girls was founded by Mary Austin Bogue, Mary Louise Rathvon and Mary Kent Wallace on Sherman Street in Denver in 1922. Denver Country Day School, an all-men's high school, was founded by Andrews D. Black and Tom Chaffee in 1953, and the two schools relocated to a portion of the spacious Blackmer Farm in Cherry Hills Village in the 1960s. The schools operated side-by-side and with joint science classes until they merged in 1974 to become Kent Denver School.

Kent Denver is located at Colorado Boulevard and Quincy Avenue in Cherry Hills Village. The 200-acre (81 ha) campus is centered on two lakes and bordered by the Highline Canal. The campus houses 44 classrooms in four main building complexes.

Most student life in the high school is centered on the Bogue Common Room, a former courtyard that was walled in to create a meeting place with a cafe for the upper school. Adjacent to the common room and the main upper school hallway is the Duncan Center, which houses the Boettcher Foundation Library. The Gates Science Center/Magness Technology Center includes classrooms, science laboratories and office space and is also home to an aquarium and three computer labs. Gates also houses an astrometric (sundial) tower that was completed with the help of KDS science students.

The theatre, music and visual arts departments are located in the Student Center for the Arts, completed in 2006, which houses the 500-seat Anschutz Family Theatre. The nearby El Pomar Theatre has been renovated and serves as a smaller, 125-seat performing arts venue.

Kent Denver's Commercial Music Program, in particular, has gained a considerable reputation both domestically and internationally. The program's R&B ensemble - the Quincy Ave. Rhythm Band - has been recognized by DownBeat Magazine seven times in the past six years. In addition, the program's Afro-Cuban ensemble - the Azucartones - garnered their first Downbeat award in 2015. The program's ensembles travel each year to learn more about the musical culture of cities around the world. In the past, student-musicians have traveled to Memphis, New Orleans, Miami, San Diego, and New York. In the spring of 2014, members of the jazz and Latin bands traveled to Havana, Cuba, to learn more about the island's rich musical history. In the summer of 2014, the Quincy Ave. Rhythm Band was invited to perform at the Porretta Soul Festival in Italy, a four-day music festival that celebrates Memphis music, and the Montreux Jazz Festival - the second largest jazz festival in the world.


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