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  • 21 Aug, 2019

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Stratford Academy

Stratford Academy is a private school in Bibb County, Georgia, United States, near Macon. It opened September 1960.

The school has a controversial history as part of the segregation academy movement. As of 2017–18, approximately 21% of students were non-white. As of 2021 the National Center for Education Statistics show Stratford's total student enrollment at 834 and total classroom teachers at 82.6.

History

When Stratford Academy first opened in 1960, classes were held in the Cowles-Woodruff Mansion.

Stratford was founded in 1960 by a group of white parents who wished to avoid the prospect of sending their children to racially integrated public schools. The founders viewed the desegregation of Bibb County public schools as an "impending crisis." In September 1960, the school opened with 117 students and 17 faculty members in the Cowles-Woodruff House. The graduation march of the first graduating class in 1962 was Dixie, not the traditional Pomp and Circumstance.

In 1970, the school's enrollment increased by 45 percent after the Supreme Court ordered the immediate desegregation of all public schools.

In 1972, Stratford Academy was expelled from Georgia Association of Independent Schools because the school refused to cut ties with segregationists. In 1974, school leaders helped create the Southeastern Association of Independent Schools (SEAIS), which supported schools that refused to have an admissions policy that included African-American students. The school is now affiliated with the Georgia Independent School Association (GISA), which was created by the merger of GAIS and SEAIS in 1986.

In 2017 political scientist Thomas Ellington stated that schools in Macon founded between 1960 and 1972 "are remarkably different than both the public and private schools formed at other times, either before or after" insofar as "those schools are generally 5 percent or fewer African-American, in a community that's roughly 67 percent black, according to the last census". In 2002, the school's headmaster, Edward England, announced financial grants to attract minority students. At the time, the student body was 93 percent white.

The Daws Student Activities Center was dedicated in September, 2017.

Academics

Stratford earned accreditation from the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (now known as Cognia) in 1982.

Athletics

In 2015, the school , whose teams are nicknamed the Eagles, joined the Georgia High School Association. In 2013 they moved to the newly formed GIAA (Georgia Independent Athletic Association). In 2021, they moved to the GISA, along with other schools in the area.

Memberships

Stratford is a member of the National Association of Independent Schools (NAIS), the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS), the Georgia Independent School Association (GISA), the Southern Association of Independent Schools (SAIS), and the College Board. In 1982, Stratford was accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools and the Southern Association of Independent Schools.

Notable alumni

References

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  2. ^ "Private School Universe Survey". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved November 18, 2017.
  3. ^ "GHSA". Georgia High School Association. Retrieved February 15, 2021.
  4. ^ Jennings, Stephen Taylor and Matthew (2013). Macon. Arcadia Publishing. p. 24. ISBN 9781467111157.
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  7. ^ "Search for Private Schools - School Detail for STRATFORD ACADEMY". nces.ed.gov. Retrieved June 8, 2021.
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  9. ^ "Six Schools kicked out for alleged segregation". Aiken Standard. May 1, 1972. p. 9. Six Schools Kicked Out For Alleged Segregation Six schools have been banished from the Georgia Association of Independent Schools (GAIS) after being accused of maintaining segregationist ties... They are Stratford Academy in Macon
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