The Lovett School | |
Motto: | Omnia ad Dei Gloriam |
Address: | 4075 Paces Ferry Road |
Zipcode: | 30327 |
Country: | United States |
Pushpin Map: | USA Georgia#USA |
Religious Affiliation: | Non-denominational |
Established: | 1926 |
Head Of School: | Meredyth Cole |
Chaplain: | Rev. Steve Allen |
Faculty: | 269 |
Gender: | Co-educational |
Mascot: | The Lovett Lion |
Rival: | The Westminster Schools (Atlanta, Georgia) |
Accreditations: | Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Southern Association of Independent Schools |
Sat: | 1930 |
Act: | 28 |
Publication: | Lovett Magazine |
Newspaper: | The OnLion |
Yearbook: | The Leonid |
Campus Size: | 100 acres |
Campus Type: | Suburban |
Colors: | Blue and white |
Students: | 1,611 |
Enrollment As Of: | 2019–20 |
Teaching Staff: | 210.4 (FTE) (2019–20) |
Ratio: | 7.7 (2019–20) |
Tuition: | $27,675- $32,130 |
The Lovett School is a coeducational kindergarten through twelfth grade independent school located in north Atlanta, Georgia, United States.
In September 1926, Eva Edwards Lovett, an educator who emphasized the development of the whole child, officially began the Lovett School with 20 boys and girls in first through third grades at a former home in Midtown Atlanta. By 1936, Lovett had become a day school, with a move to a wooded campus north of the city off West Wesley Road.
In 1960-61, Lovett opened at 4075 Paces Ferry Road—Lovett's current location—with an enrollment of 1,024 students, representing all grades except the 12th.
In 1962, Lovett's first senior class graduated, all having been accepted at colleges and universities of their choice.
By 1964, both the elementary and high schools were accredited by the Georgia Commission of Accreditation (and each year subsequently), and the upper school was accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools. Campus building projects continued through the 1960s, 70s, and 80s; bringing to campus the Kilpatrick Stadium, Loridans House, Smith Natatorium, Vasser Woolley Library, Fuqua Center, Wallace Gym, Hite Wellness Center, and more.
In 1992, Lovett's philosophy was rewritten, a mission statement was developed, and the school also purchased 320 acres of cloudforest, known as Siempre Verde, in Ecuador for the purpose of establishing a research and education center.[1]
in 1999, the school was named an "independent school of distinction" in its Fall 1999 interim review by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools.
The school celebrated its 75th anniversary in 2000-01[2] with events such as a history exhibition and a reunion for former alumni, faculty, staff and friends of the school. That year, Lovett also embarked on its 75th Anniversary Campaign to raise funds for a construction and improvement plan. The fundraising goal for Phase I of that project was $55 million. Phase II of the project was started in 2003 under new headmaster, William S. Peebles IV. It was completed in 2009 and included a new middle school and community center.
In 2017, the school announced that Meredyth Cole would replace retiring Headmaster William S. Peebles IV at the end of the 2017–18 school year.[3]
In 1963, the Lovett School became the focus of a desegregation controversy when it rejected the applications of three black students. In 1963, Coretta Scott King contacted the school and asked if it had a racially nondiscriminatory admissions policy.[4] When the school responded that it would admit a black student, her son, Martin Luther King III applied. However, there was not a guarantee that any particular student would be admitted. [5] King was rejected. The Episcopal Diocese then distanced itself from the school.[4]
At the center of this long ago debate were the school's ties to the Episcopal Diocese of Atlanta, which had been established in 1954. The national Episcopal Church had issued directives to its member dioceses to integrate their institutions; the Lovett School's refusal to do so placed the bishop of Atlanta, the Rt. Rev. Randolph Claiborne Jr., in a difficult situation.[6] After a number of pickets at the school organized by the Episcopal Society for Cultural and Racial Unity, the diocese and school attempted to resolve the situation by severing ties with each other. In later years, the school reportedly revised its admission policy with regards to race. Today, the school features many multicultural programs.[7]