Cardigan Mountain School was founded in 1945 by a group of men with a vision for an educational program tailored to the needs of boys in the pre-preparatory school years. The founders were prominent New England educators, businessmen, and civic leaders, including Ernest Martin Hopkins, William R. Brewster, and Ralph Flanders. Land for the school's campus had originally been donated to Dartmouth College by the Haffenreffer family. The founders believed the location to be ideal for a boys' school: the land and Haffenreffer mansion, which initially housed classrooms and a dormitory and is now called Clark-Morgan Hall, are situated on a peninsula in Canaan Street Lake with views of Mount Cardigan and the White Mountains to the east and the Green Mountains to the west. The school opened in 1946 with an enrollment of 24 boys, and its growth was fueled by the merger of the Clark School of Hanover, New Hampshire into Cardigan in 1953. Mission statement: Cardigan Mountain School offers a close-knit community that prepares middle school boys—in mind, body, and spirit—for responsible and meaningful lives in a global society.
Summer session
Cardigan Mountain School runs its Summer Session usually beginning in June and ending in August. Summer Session, unlike the academic year program, is coeducational and serves younger students for three- and six-week experiences that include academic enrichment classes in the morning, and summer-camp style activities for the rest of the day. A highlight of the summer's activities is a competition known as "Green and White" that runs throughout the Summer Session in which students are assigned to either the Green Team or the White Team to compete in an activity selected by the faculty on a Wednesday evening. The students will wear special tee shirts on Green and White nights. In 2011, the Cardigan Outdoor Recreation Expeditions program was added to its Summer Session offerings. C.O.R.E. participants experience week-long trips that may include hiking, camping, canoeing, kayaking, and outdoor education programming.
Facilities
The school has numerous dormitories and houses for boarding students and faculty.
Dormitories
Hayward 1 and 2
Clark Morgan
Brewster 1 and 2
Hinman 1 and 2
French 1and 2
McCusker 1 and 2
Houses
Franklin
Greenwood
Banks
Funnell
Dewar
Other buildings and facilities
The school's principal academic buildings are Hopkins, Bronfman and Stoddard. Other facilities include the Cardigan Commons, the school's chapel, the Hamilton Family Student Health Center, the Kenerson Athletic Center, the Wakely Center, the Charles C. Gates I.D.E.A. Shop, athletic fields, tennis courts, mountain biking course, woods and trails, a sledding slope on Clancy Hill, and a boat house with a fleet of boats on Canaan Street Lake. The school once maintained and ran a ski slope on property known as The Pinnacle, but it is no longer in use. The school has an indoor hockey rink known as Turner Arena, located in the Wakely Center, which converts to four tennis courts in the spring.