Wake Christian Academy
Wake Christian Academy is a private, Christian, co-educational school in Raleigh, North Carolina, United States. It was established in 1966 as a segregation academy in response to the School integration in [the United States|racial integration of public schools]. The academy enrolls students from Kindergarten through 12th grade and is divided into three divisions.
History
Wake Christian Academy was established in 1966 as Wake Academy by a group of segregationists that included L. C. Purdy, a former president of White Citizens' Councils. Purdy, along with the White Citizens' Council, tried to raise funds in time to open a school building in the fall of 1966, but fell short and had to lease a residence in which to operate the school. School board president H.W. Carey, referencing the founding of the school, told the News & Observer that he "hope the school would be known for its quality education, but it would be false if I said integration didn't enter into it".In 1969, Purdy told a reporter that "all you get in public schools is integration, not education. The children are pawns in sociological experiments". Principal Mrs. Franklin Pierce said that although the school was formed to maintain segregation, she was seeking to change the school's image.
In 1970, North Carolina Supreme Court justice I. Beverly Lake Jr. gave a speech to students and parents at the school in which he denounced school desegregation. Lake noted "the products of jungles" were enrolling in public education and opined that [Segregation academy|all white private schools] like Wake Christian Academy "offer to our state her best hope for safe passage through perilous times." In May 1970, school founder L. C. Purdy was also a leader of the local chapter of the White Citizens Council and campaigned against a public school bond issue on the grounds the funds would "be used more integration than for education."
In June 1971, following an IRS directive for the pre-schools to advertise a racially nondiscriminatory admissions policy, board member L. C. Purdy initially told a reporter that he was not aware of any such notice being received by the school. He later added, “we are not going let the federal government dictate our admissions policies, even if it means losing our tax-exempt status.” The following month, Purdy told a reporter that no Black students had applied to the school, adding, “All students have to have fine educational qualifications or we won’t talk to them.”
In 1973, a News and Observer article reported that two Wake County private schools had previously lost their federal tax-exempt status due to findings of racial discrimination.
In 1980, Midway Christian Schools merged into Wake Christian.