Northpoint Christian School Explained

Northpoint Christian School
Motto:Find Your True North
Type:Private
Segregation academy (former)
Affiliation:Baptist (1973-2013)
Christian (no specific denomination) 2013-present[1]
President:Jim Ferguson
Streetaddress:7400 Getwell Road
Zipcode:38672
Country:United States
Coordinates:34.9675°N -89.9331°W
Pushpin Map:Mississippi
Enrollment:1075
Enrollment As Of:2022-2023
Avg Class Size:20
Ratio:12.5 to 1
Free Label 1:Tuition
Free 1:$4075-$8695
Colors:Navy, White, and Carolina Blue
Nickname:Trojans
Grades:pre-K–12
Established:1973
Website:NCSTrojans.com

Northpoint Christian School (NCS) is a private Christian school located in Southaven, Mississippi, that has been described as a white flight school. The school was founded in 1973 by a group of ten White Southern Baptist churches in the Whitehaven section of Memphis, Tennessee, at a time when public schools were integrating Black and White students. Programs for kindergarten through Grade 8 began in 1973, and grades 9-12 were added the following year. As of 2014, the school was the third-largest private school in Greater Memphis.[2]

History

The Southern Baptist Educational Center was established by ten Southern Baptist churches in 1973 as a segregation academy seeking to avoid racially integrated public schools.[3] [4] [5] When the school encountered financial problems in the summer of 1976, five of the churches dropped out, but the remaining churches raised cash and bought bonds to keep the school going. In 1977, white flight to the suburbs caused a decline in enrollment from 1,279 to 885. This resulted in another financial crisis and several churches, including Graceland, Hickory Hills, LaBelle Haven, LaBelle Place and Whitehaven Baptist Churches decided to end their support of the school. Broadway Baptist took over the schools debts and from then on solely operated the school. Broadway immediately began providing busing to the school.[6]

In 1988, after what the school claimed was "The area was losing professionals as well as families who could afford to send their children to SBEC." The school moved from Memphis, to suburban Southaven, Mississippi as many white people of Memphis were moving to Southaven at that time during white flight.[7]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Northpoint Christian School Educational Foundation . 2016 . National Center for Education Statistics. 27 Nov 2018.
  2. Web site: Largest private schools in Memphis for 2014.
  3. News: Maxey . Ron . SBEC adopts new name: Northpoint Christian School . Memphis Commercial Appeal . August 6, 2013.
  4. Book: Pohlmann, Marcus D.. Opportunity Lost: Race and Poverty in the Memphis City Schools. 2008. Univ. of Tennessee Press. 9781572336384. en. 85.
  5. Web site: Northpoint Christian Schools . 7 January 2020.
  6. News: Vancil . Paul . Church to assume school's operation: Financial woes spur shift . Memphis Press-Scimitar . November 9, 1977 . 21.
  7. News: Van Tuyl . Chris . New name, same goal . Commercial Appeal . August 22, 2013 . It might take a little getting used to. Southern Baptist Educational Center is now Northpoint Christian School..
  8. News: Bayne . William C . Boulevard Baptist moving from Holmes to Southaven . Memphis Commercial Appeal . September 14, 1995 . EC2.
  9. News: Dedication set at school . Memphis Commercial Appeal . October 7, 1988 . A16.
  10. Web site: School ID . tssaa.org . TSSAA . 18 October 2023.
  11. Web site: Classification . tssaa.org . TSSAA . 18 October 2023.
  12. https://www.ncstrojans.com/athletics Athletics
  13. Web site: Northpoint Christian School . 18 October 2023.
  14. {{Cite book| url=https://www.actionnews5.com/2022/04/29/northpoint-christian-school-questioned-controversial-lesson-plan/

    Campuses

    Churches

    Because of the urgency to start a school immediately as integration took place, in 1972 grades K-8 were initially housed in Broadway Baptist Church in Whitehaven while the high school was housed at Graceland Baptist Church.[8]

    Holmes Road

    The second 36acres Memphis campus, located in Whitehaven at the intersection of Holmes Road and Tulane Road, was utilized from 1974 until 1988, when it was sold to the Memphis City School System to house the John P. Freeman School.[9]

    Southaven

    A 61acres property shared with Broadway Baptist in Southaven, Mississippi was purchased in 1986, and the school relocated there in September 1988 with 600 students.

    Athletics

    Despite being located in Mississippi, NCS competes in Division II, Class A of the Tennessee Secondary School Athletic Association (TSSAA) Division II. The athletic director is Ryan Richardson.[10] [11] Sports offered at NCS include: baseball, boys and girls basketball, cheerleading, cross country, football, boys and girls golf, boys and girls soccer, softball, swimming, tennis, track, volleyball, and trap shooting.[12]

    The school has won TSSAA championships in:[13]

    • Baseball (2009, 2023)
    • Girls basketball (2016, 2017)
    • Football (2003)
    • Boys golf (2011)
    • Boys tennis (2008)
    • Girls track and field (2001)

    See also

    External links

  15. {{Cite book| url=https://thedmonline.com/opinion-i-went-to-a-segregation-academy-now-i-want-to-ban-them/

    At the start of the 2013-2014 school year, the schools name was changed from Southern Baptist Educational Center to Northpoint Christian School[7] and began marketing itself as non-denominational rather than Southern Baptist.

    On April 29, 2022, Northpoint was criticized by Memphis local news source, WMC-TV, reported that a teacher put signs of "colored" and "whites" over water fountains for a civil rights lesson, while alarming questions and criticisms, the current president, Jim Ferguson, defended it as "part of a lesson plan".[8]