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About MFS
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History View the extensive MFS Photo Archives In the early 1780s, thirty-three Quaker families pooled funds to purchase a lot from Ephraim Haines with the intention of building a Friends school.
The kindergarten building -- now known as the White Building -- was constructed in 1927. A new high school was built in 1929 and enlarged in 1958 to create a new gym and additional classrooms. In 1965, the present Lower School was built. Stokes Hall, a three-story addition linking the Upper and Lower School buildings, was completed in 1987-88, and houses the Diller Memorial Library, science facilities, computer laboratories and administrative offices. A Dining Hall/Commons, where students eat lunch and where the school community gathers for special events, was built in 1997. The new Field House and renovated Art Center were opened in September 2002. The Woodward Henry Diller Memorial Library in Stokes Hall was completely renovated in the summer of 2003. In December 2006, MFS purchased the property at 123 Chester Avenue (the former Acme supermarket). Plans to utilize the building for school use changed and plans are currently being made to lease the property. In 2008, the school purchased the former Greenleaf Retirement facility on Main Street, a property contiguous to the current MFS campus near the Field House and Tennis Courts. The property includes: the Greenleaf Building, which looks out on Main Street, and Hartman Hall, formerly the Greenleaf South Annex, now a two-story classroom building. The Quaker-run Greenleaf community served as a boarding home for elderly and retired Friends since 1896. One special connection that Moorestown Friends and the Greenleaf shared is that Moorestown Friends School 1901 graduate Alice Paul (1885-1977), famed leader of the women’s suffrage movement, who helped secure the passage of the 19th Amendment guaranteeing for women the right to vote, spent her final years at the Greenleaf.
In 2011-12, renovations took place on the Greenleaf South Annex to transform the former boarding facility into a new classroom building. On May 4, 2012, the building was officially opened and dedicated as Hartman Hall, after beloved MFS math teacher, Neil Hartman, who taught at MFS for 33 years. Hartman Hall contains eight math classrooms, a choral music suite, a choral sectionals rehearsal room, a conference room, tech lab, commons area and additional locker space for students. The building is air-conditioned, utilizing a geothermal-based system. McShap Path leads to Hartman Hall from the Mecray Courtyard, located outside the Field House. The campus also includes seven all-purpose playing fields, two baseball diamonds and five tennis courts. Facilities include four gymnasiums, a fitness center, a 450-seat air-conditioned auditorium, a Music Computing Center, an art studio and wood shop.
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