
An arch frames Shattuck-St. Mary’s School in Faribault, Minnesota. Minnesota Prairie Roots file photo.
WHENEVER I VISIT the campus of Shattuck-St. Mary’s School on Faribault’s east side, I feel like I am walking onto an East Coast college campus. This place of aged stone buildings presents a scholarly image that seems more post-secondary than prestigious college prep school. Known for producing hockey legends, SSM has a current enrollment of nearly 500 students in grades 6 – 12. Most board here.
Some of those students mingled and participated in Shattuck’s Campus Christmas Walk, an annual holiday gift to the community. I try to attend each December, enjoying the figure skating show, music and treats and the opportunity to view the historic buildings in holiday splendor.
The dark handcrafted woodwork, the sagging stairs, the stained glass windows and more speak to the history of SSM. The school traces its roots to an Episcopal mission school and seminary established in 1858.
But today it’s every bit technologically modern within aged walls. There’s a strong vibe of arts and culture and academics. That Shattuck welcomes locals like me onto campus is a good thing in building community relations and exposure of all this school offers. I couldn’t help but think while at Shattuck on Saturday how much my son would have liked this educational setting and the challenges offered therein. He graduated last spring from Tufts University in greater Boston.

Skaters from Shattuck-St. Mary’s Figure Kating Center of Excellence presented a Christmas Spectacular on Ice.
As I watched the figure skating show, I swayed to “Feliz Navidad” and other holiday tunes while talented skaters glided and twirled across the ice in their sparkly sequined costumes. I remembered then how much I once loved to skate on a bumpy pond in the shadow of a small town grain elevator.
A short walk from the ice arena, I listened to string instrument solos, delighting in that music and the holiday tunes of carolers performing in an entry hallway. And I remembered how I once stood on the stage of my high school dressed as a Dickens caroler with a yellow posterboard bonnet wrapped around my head.
Farther down, in the Morgan Refectory (the dining hall), kids munched on cookies they’d decorated, green and red frosting outlining their lips. They also created Christmas ornaments. I paused with my husband to sip a cup of hot chocolate, trying to warm myself after an hour in a cold ice arena. Years ago, after completing farm chores, I would thaw my numb fingers over the milkhouse stove.
The sight of kids sticking their fingers inside the mouths of oversized nutcrackers caused me to chuckle. I recall doing the same decades ago with a nutcracker my sister received from her godfather. There’s something about a nutcracker…

I entered the Shattuck complex through a rear entry and shot this from inside, showing the stone exteriors of campus buildings.
And there’s something about Shattuck during the Campus Christmas Walk. Even without any kids in tow, I experienced the holiday magic of this historic place.
© Copyright 2016 Audrey Kletscher Helbling















Thank you for a wonderful review, Audrey! I was glad to speak with you and am happy you were able to be with us this year. – Amy Wolf
Sent from my iPhone
You are welcome, Amy. It was nice to meet you. I enjoyed the events and only wish I could have stayed for the chapel concert, too. But it was a full day of activities for me.
It does look magical, that is for sure. Love the nutcrackers–those guys are almost life-sized. One of the local stores has one out almost year round in downtown Brevard and it is huge. I can only imagine how many pictures have been taken with it!
There’s something about a nutcracker…
Beautiful campus
Have you been on campus, Dan? You and Cyndie would enjoy photographing the architecture.
No not yet
Lovely.
The cookie decorating kit is FAB.
Also, “YOU” are magic, darling. xx
Thank you and thank you.
Love the glimpses of the inside of Shattuck as well as your lovely shots of the outside. I grew up south of Owatonna but have never visited here.
Shattuck is absolutely beautiful. If you ever get the opportunity, at least drive the circle drive through the Shattuck campus.
This looks like a wonderful event…is it a one time deal or can we still go look?
It’s just a one-day event, Valerie.
I am alway in awe when you post about of this beautiful building. I would love to explore this school one day. Perhaps another “bucket list” destination. I had no idea it was for 6th – 12th graders, I was thinking it was a college? Do people really still send their little ones away to boarding school! That would be so hard for me.
Lots of international students attend Shattuck as well as students from across the U.S. Yes, most live on campus. I couldn’t send my child off to boarding school either. It was difficult enough with Caleb as a college student across the country in Boston.
I have never been there so your photos took me inside to enjoy a little of their holiday spirit. Beautiful buildings are nestled among a wintery setting.
If it hadn’t been snowing while I was at Shattuck, I would have photographed the front of Shumway Hall with its grand tower. The aged buildings are simply stunning.