Delta Academy (Mississippi)

Delta Academy is a private school in Marks, Mississippi, United States. It serves K-12, with elementary school, junior high school, and high school.[2]

Delta Academy
Location
Delta Academy
Coordinates34.248370°N 90.259888°W / 34.248370; -90.259888
Information
Former nameQuitman County Day School
TypePrivate
DenominationChristian[1]
Established1964 (1964)
Opened1965
NCES School ID00735873
Teaching staff16.4[1]
GradesK-12
Enrollment175[1] (2016)
Last updated: 1 December 2017

History

The Quitman County Educational Foundation founded the school in 1964. The Quitman County Day School opened in 1965, with four classes, two students, one teacher who also served as a principal, and one other teacher. It moved to the former C. R. Berryhill Schoolhouse in September 1966. At that time it had 42 students in grades 1-5 and 3 teachers. In the 1967-1968 school year it moved into another building. At that time it had 116 students in grades 1-8 and 10 teachers. In 1968-1969 the high school, Delta Academy, opened. To accommodate the high school, the Quitman County school leased a Walnut Land Company building. 110 students were in grades 9 through 12. In the 1970-1971 school year the board of the private school increased the high school space by two due to a large number of high school students entering.[3]

The Quitman County Educational Foundation founded it to establish and operate one or more kindergarten, primary or secondary schools. In the fall of 1965 County Day School opened its first session in the Presbyterian manse with Mrs. Charlotte Owen as teacher and principal, with four classes, twenty-two students and one other teacher. In September 1966, County Day school moved to the old C.R.Berryhill house with grades 1 through 5, 42 students and three teachers. In the year of 1967-68 the school entered its new building with grades 1-8, 116 students and 10 teachers. The high school was established in 1968-69 with the lease of a building from Walnut Land Company and Delta Academy was opened with grades 9-12 and 110 students. The high school was in demand and the Board found it necessary to more than double the size of the high school in the year 1970-71.

In 1974 the all-purpose "gymnatorium" was completed to provide space for indoor athletic events, stage productions and banquets. Then in 1976 a building program began to consolidate all grades on the Marks campus thus bringing grades k-12 on one campus.

In the summer of 1970 the Media Center and Study Hall was completed and in 1989 a weight room was constructed to serve the needs of students and the community. In 1991 "The Little Red Schoolhouse" was moved to its present site to house the K3 and K4 program. In 1997 a new high school science building was constructed. Then in 1997-98 a new lighting system was completed for the baseball field. In 1998 a new football/tract field was finished with the first football game played on it October 1, 1999. In 2000 construction of a new softball field was completed, and in 2001 a new wooden basketball floor was installed in the gym. Then in 2004 renovations began on the baseball field with a new fence, press box and scoreboard. Additional renovations began on a multi-sport concession stand and restroom.

Racial segregation

Schools in Quitman County are effectively segregated by race. White students almost exclusively attend private schools while Black children attend the local public schools.

School Total Students White Students Black Students Note
Quitman County 10,117 30.47% 68.62% 2010 Census
Delta Academy (Private) 175 147 (84%) 17 (9.7%) [4]
M. S. Palmer High School (Public) 351 4 (1%) 347 (98.8%) [5]

References

  1. "Private School Universe Survey". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved 1 December 2017.
  2. "Faculty." Delta Academy. Retrieved on April 8, 2012.
  3. "History." Delta Academy. Retrieved on April 8, 2012.
  4. "Delta Academy". National Center for Educational Statistics. US Department of Education. Retrieved 15 June 2019.
  5. "M S Palmer High School". National Center for Educational Statistics. US Department of Education. Retrieved 15 June 2019.
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