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Maine Central Institute

Maine Central Institute
MCILogo.png
Location
Pittsfield, Maine 04967
USA
Coordinates 44°46′46″N 69°23′13″W / 44.7795°N 69.3870°W / 44.7795; -69.3870Coordinates: 44°46′46″N 69°23′13″W / 44.7795°N 69.3870°W / 44.7795; -69.3870
Information
Type Private, Boarding
Motto Certum pete finem
(Latin: "Aim for a sure end")
Established 1866
Head of school Christopher J. Hopkins
Faculty 37
Enrollment 448 total
140 boarding
311 day
Average class size 15 students
Student to teacher ratio 15:1
Campus Suburban, 50 acres (1 km²)
Color(s) Maroon & White         
Athletics 22 sports
Athletics conference New England Prep School Athletic Conference (NEPSAC) and Little Ten Conference, class B, KVAC class B
Mascot Huskies
Average SAT scores (2005) 513 verbal
503 math
Average ACT scores (2005) 28
Website

The Maine Central Institute (MCI), is an independent high school, founded in 1866, located in Pittsfield, Maine, in the United States. The school enrolls approximately 500 students. MCI is a nonsectarian institution. The school has both boarding students and day students.

The Maine Central Institute was founded in 1866 by Rev. Oren B. Cheney and Rev. Ebenezer Knowlton, abolitionists who also founded Bates College in nearby Lewiston, Maine. The Maine State Seminary, originally part of Bates, served as a college preparatory school, until it was dissolved in the late 1860s, and MCI (along with the Nichols Latin School in Lewiston) largely took the Seminary's place as a feeder school for Bates. The school was at its inception affiliated with the Free Will Baptists, but is officially non-sectarian today.

The first building, the Institute Building (Founders Hall), was completed in 1869 and served as the primary campus building until 1958. The campus has expanded greatly over the past 140 years, and became officially coeducational in 1903 with the purchase of a boarding house from Benjamin Bowden and the construction of a second floor making it Ceder Croft Hall, which in 1927 burned down during a Christmas break. Immediately after, a fundraising campaign initiated by MCI alumni began with the intention to rebuild a residence hall. The dorm was completed in October 1928 and named Alumni Hall after the generous efforts from alumni. Due to World War I increasing enrollment in 1911 it became necessary to erect a female dormitory. The building today called Weymouth Hall houses the offices of Athletics and Activities, the Dean of Students and the Dean of Residential Life, as well as the television studio (WMCI), the Health and Wellness Center, the Campus Bookstore, the Student Union, and classrooms for MCI's prestigious ESL (English as a Second Language) program.

Two athletic buildings have been built—Parks Gymnasium (still standing) which was finished in 1936 due to the MCI students' increased interest in athletics and in 1988 the construction of Wright Gymnasium which houses many of MCI's trophies and recognitions and a state of the art weight room and basketball court. The John W. Manson house was donated in 1944; since that date it has been residence of the head of school.


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Wikipedia

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