St. John's Chapel
Groton MA

01450

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Who we are

St. John's Chapel is serving the Groton community and engaging and encouraging others through a life-changing journey in Groton, Massachusetts.

Our mission is to nurture a diverse and welcoming community, committed to following fearlessly wherever God is leading us and make Disciples of Jesus Christ for the transformation of Groton and the world!

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Location of worship

St. John's Chapel
282 Farmers Row
Groton, MA 01450
United States
Phone: 978-448-3363
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Church Pastor

The Rev. Allison Read
The Rev. Allison Read
Chaplain
282 Farmers Row
Groton, MA 01450
United States
Phone: 978-448-3363
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Leadership

Leader Name:
The Rev. Allison Read   Edit
Leader Position:
Chaplain   Edit
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St. John's Chapel Service Times

The weekday Chapel program is led by our chaplain, an Episcopal priest, and the Spiritual Life prefects, who represent our various religious traditions. The Chapel strives to be inviting, inclusive, and a safe place in which to strengthen the foundation of the community.

A typical weekday service opens with prayer, followed by a short reading that reflects anything from the speaker’s religious tradition to a favorite novel. Next, a student, faculty member, alumna/us, or guest delivers a Chapel talk. Whether funny, insightful, challenging, or touching, the talks provide a window to a deeper presence that daily routines sometimes obscure. The weekday service concludes with communal singing, often a hymn, sometimes followed by musical postludes performed by students.

Students are required to attend a weekend service each week; they choose among the services offered that best fit their own tradition or ethos. Many students from various Christian denominations attend a Sunday service in the Episcopal tradition at St. John’s Chapel. Jewish students often choose to observe a Friday evening Sabbath service; Muslim students gather in prayer and study; Hindu students gather for puja and study; Buddhist students (and many who consider themselves spiritual but not religious) find quiet time for meditation during a weekly sangha; and many Roman Catholic students attend Mass at the local parish.

St. John's Chapel service times last updated on the 20th of January, 2024
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Worship Languages

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Special Needs/Accessibility

Wheelchair-accessible meeting space and toilet   Edit

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St. John's Chapel History

The vibrant and diverse Groton School of the twenty-first century took root in the inspired mind of the young Endicott Peabody.

Before founding Groton in 1884, at age twenty-seven, Mr. Peabody's life had taken many turns. Educated in England at Cheltenham and Cambridge, he pursued a banking career but abruptly turned away from finance and toward the Episcopal Church. Only months after the famed gunfight at the OK Corral, Mr. Peabody arrived in Tombstone, Arizona. In “the town too tough to die,” the Anglophilic Yankee won over the miners, cowboys, and townspeople and built the first Episcopal church in the state.

But Mr. Peabody did not feel drawn to pastoral work and headed back East to complete his seminary studies. A brief stint as a schoolteacher provided his calling. He would start a school that explicitly sought to instill high-minded principles in the offspring of the most successful American entrepreneurs of the Gilded Age. The campus would sit on rich farmland along the Nashua River, with vistas of the distant mountains of Wachusett and Monadnock.

In the beginning, twenty-four students, the Reverend Peabody, and two colleagues, the Reverends Sherrard Billings and William Amory Gardner, formed the school family. As Mr. Billings wrote years later, in 1930, the men shared “the conviction … that there could be a school where boys and men could live together, work together, and play together in friendly fashion with friction rare.”

As Groton has changed with the times, both its core and its outward appearance have remained constant. A deliberately small school, Groton today rests upon the foundation set forth long ago by the Reverend Endicott Peabody: the belief that a school embodying the best characteristics of a family will create the optimal environment in which students can learn and grow. Today’s headmaster, Temba Maqubela, continues the ideals of Mr. Peabody—to lead a school that offers the highest quality academic education, instills strong character, builds leaders, and inspires lives.

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. at Groton

February 4, 1963 Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. spent two days at Groton School in February 1963—a visit that opened students’ minds and inspired several to pursue civil rights advocacy on their own.

Over a two-day visit, Dr. King preached in the Chapel, gave an evening lecture, and met with students for informal discussion. Six weeks later, he would be arrested in Alabama and pen his famous “Letter from Birmingham Jail.” Six months later, during the March on Washington, he would deliver his “I Have a Dream” speech. Themes and a few key phrases overlap between the Groton speech and the “I Have a Dream” speech.

The Reverend John Crocker, Groton headmaster from 1940–65 and a staunch advocate for civil rights and social justice, had extended the invitation to Dr. King.

Former students, who wish to remain anonymous, recorded Dr. King’s evening lecture and gave the recording to the school. Thanks to their generosity, and the kind permission granted by the Estate of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Groton School is honored to share this speech—an important moment in the annals of Groton history and, more important, of United States history.

1884 Endicott Peabody founded Groton School.

1899 Headmaster Peabody invited Booker T. Washington, a freed slave, to speak on campus. Mr. Washington spoke at Groton again in 1905.

1899-1903 The school was a success and the campus we know today was already taking shape: the Schoolhouse, still the hub of Groton’s Circle, was built in 1899. In 1900, the workers pictured completed St. John’s Chapel. The gym (now the Dining Hall) opened in 1903.

1904 President Theodore Roosevelt, a close friend and relative by marriage of Endicott Peabody’s, spoke at Groton’s commencement. His four sons went on to attend Groton.

1917 Mr. Peabody shepherded the school through World War I: the Groton boys conducted military drills, and wheat was grown right on the Circle to help with the war effort. Many graduates went on to fight in WWI, and several gave their lives.

1920 By 1920, Groton School had grown to about twenty-two faculty members and 180 students.

1929 During the Depression, Groton School, thanks to a recent bequest, was able to offer aid to families who no longer could afford the tuition.

1931 When Frankin Delano Roosevelt was governor of New York, he delivered Groton’s Prize Day speech.

1933 Franklin Delano Roosevelt, a graduate of Groton’s Form of 1900, became president. Mr. Peabody, who had officiated at Franklin’s wedding to Eleanor, was invited to all four of FDR’s inaugurations and attended all but the last.

1940 Endicott Peabody retired after leading Groton School for fifty-six years. The next headmaster, the Reverend John Crocker (Groton Form of 1918), remained at the helm for twenty-five years.

1941 World War II led to austerity measures; with workers headed to war, the Groton boys picked up jobs around campus, such as cleaning, waiting tables, and shoveling coal.

1952 Known for doing what simply was moral and right, Headmaster Crocker oversaw the admission of the first black student to Groton.

1963 Mr. Crocker invited Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. to speak at Groton; the civil rights leader spent two days on campus.

1965 Mr. Crocker took Groton boys to march with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. in Boston. Graduates today recall a headmaster who instilled a deep understanding of civil rights and social justice through his sermons and his actions. That year also marked Mr. Crocker’s retirement.

1965 Reverend Bertrand N. Honea, Jr. led the school from 1965 to 1969.

1969 Paul Wright became headmaster and served until 1974; he was the first headmaster who was not a clergyman.

1970 The board designated a coeducation committee, and its proposal was approved by the trustees a year later. The decision was so controversial that the proposal was given a second review, but ultimately reaffirmed.

1974 The Reverend Rowland Cox became headmaster as the school was about to become coeducational. He served until his death in 1977. From 1977–78, Peter Camp was acting headmaster.

1975 The school welcomed the first female students to campus. Among the many changes accompanying coeducation was the hiring of full-time female faculty. Today, approximately half of the faculty are women and half of Groton students are girls.

1978 William Polk ’58 became headmaster and served until 2003.

2002 The Dillon Art Center, designed by Perry Dean Rogers & Partners, opened.

2003 Richard Commons became headmaster and served until 2013.

2005 The Campbell Performing Arts Center, designed by architect Graham Gund, opened.

2008 The school initiated a policy waiving tuition for families earning less than $75,000/year (now $80,000).

2013 The current headmaster, Temba Maqubela, joined Groton. From day one, he has stressed the ideal, and reality, of inclusion.

2014 The Board of Trustees embraced the GRoton Affordability and INclusion (GRAIN) initiative, naming it the school’s number-one strategic priority. GRAIN ensured that the school would meet each applicant’s full financial need and froze tuition for three years.

2015 The newly renovated and expanded Schoolhouse opened. The project integrated the stately original structure—which was virtually unchanged—with a significant expansion that includes state-of-the-art science classrooms and laboratories, communal gathering places, a Fabrications Lab, and the the fifty-foot-high Sackett Forum, dedicated by former students to longtime Classics teacher Hugh Sackett. This was the sixth renovation to the 1899 Schoolhouse.

2017 On Christmas Eve, GRoton Affordability and INclusion (GRAIN) hit its $50 million milestone. It went on to raise more than $54 million.

2018 Architectural Digest named Groton School’s Circle the most beautiful independent school campus in Massachusetts. Designed by landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted (Central Park, Boston Public Garden), the Circle today looks largely as it did more than one hundred years ago.

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The power of Christian prayer You are...
You are the shade in the heat, You are shelter in the cold, You are eyes to the blind, You are a staff to the pilgrim, You are an island in the sea, You are a stronghold upon land, You are healing to the sick. You are the luck of every joy, You are the light of the sun's beam, You are the door of lordly welcome, You are the pole star of guidance, You are the step of the roe of the height, You are the step of the white-faced mare, You are the grace of the swimming swan, You are the jewel in each mystery.
St. John's Chapel listing was last updated on the 20th of January, 2024
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