About Our School
We are a team made up of passionate and skilled staff members, supportive parents, and beautiful children
Statement of Purpose: Rights and Responsibilities
The Daniel Butler School is dedicated to providing a school community where students will acquire the foundational skills, knowledge, and behaviors needed for life-long learning. We believe this can best be achieved in an environment characterized by mutual respect and shared responsibility. Our success will be built on a partnership of teachers who are committed to their profession and families who ensure their children come to school ready to learn.
At Butler we strive to provide all students with three basic rights:
The right to an excellent elementary education.
The right to attend a school where all children are respected.
The right to attend a clean and safe school.
For children these responsibilities are:
Each right rests upon, or is balanced by, a set of responsibilities which are accepted and acted upon by every segment of the school community: students, teachers, and parents.
To responsibly follow the rules which ensure everyone's safety, including taking care of the school building and the materials which are provided for learning.
To respect both the adults and students with whom they work and play. Basic civility.
To come to school ready to learn and to work hard while here.
About Daniel Butler Elementary School
Butler elementary school has a library, a gymnasium, a cafeteria, music and art rooms, outdoor play structure, playing area and field. Digital devices (a combination of Chromebooks, iPads, and desktops) are available in all classrooms and in the library/media center.
In addition to the basic curriculum, learning is enriched on a regular basis through special events and activities. The Arts and Enrichment Programs of the parent-teacher association sponsors:
artists,
authors, and
scientists in residence,
marine biologists,
musicians,
opera performances,
historical educators,
dance companies, and
storytellers.
These programs supplement the curriculum. In addition, each class typically participates in at least one field trip each year. Parents may elect to have their child attend an Extended Day program for a fee. These programs are structured and supervised to include time for reading, homework, arts and crafts, sports, outdoor time, and other healthy activities.
Daniel Butler Elementary School has been housed in two still existing buildings during its one hundred, thirteen years history. The first building stands at the corner of Trapelo and Waverly Street. This structure was built in 1873 and was initially called the Waverly Village School. In 1895 the Belmont School Committee renamed it honor of the area’s most distinguished citizen of the time, Daniel Butler.
Born in Connecticut in 1808 , Reverend Butler was a graduate of both Yale University and the Andover Theological Seminary. After serving a church in Dorchester, he moved to Belmont in 1865 and would spend the rest of his life on Sycamore Street in a house across the street from the current Butler School. He was for many years the president of the American Bible Association. He also served his new community in a number of capacities. Among these was membership on the Belmont School Committee and two-terms as the town’s representative to the state legislature. He passed away in 1893. However the tradition of service lived on in his family. His son Henry was principal of Belmont High School from 1881 through 1899.
By the late 1800’s the school age population of Waverly Village had outgrown the first Butler school. Construction on the second building, our current home, to become Butler school was completed in 1900. Continued increases in the number of students attending the school required two additions to the original structure, one in the 1920’s and one in the late 1940’s A final renovation was undertaken in the early 1980’s at which time the gym and link area of the school were added. Butler is the oldest town building still in service. Today it combines a classical facade with an updated interior. The result is a school building of singular charm.
Today Butler is home to an increasingly diverse school population of roughly three hundred and thirty students. While it still includes some long-time local families who have attended for three or more generations, it is also home to students from over twenty different countries. The result is rich mixture of backgrounds and cultures. Daniel Butler looks forward to continuing its service for the residents of Waverly Square into the future.