Charlotte Country Day School
Address
1440 Carmel Road

28226

United States
Coordinates35°08′47″N 80°48′13″W / 35.1465°N 80.8037°W / 35.1465; -80.8037
Information
TypePrivate
MottoFortitudine Ac Pietate
(With Courage and Reverence)
Established1941 (1941)
School districtIndependent
CEEB code340666
Head of schoolDavid Mancos (interim)
Faculty190+
GradesK12
Enrollment~1,600
Average class sizeApproximately 15
Student to teacher ratio12:1
CampusCannon and Bissell campuses
Color(s)Green and gold
  
Athletics66 teams
Athletics conferenceNCISAA
MascotBuccaneers (Bucs)
RivalCharlotte Catholic High School, Charlotte Latin School, Providence Day School
Websitewww.charlottecountryday.org

Charlotte Country Day School is a private, secular school in Charlotte, North Carolina, with classes in grades Junior Kindergarten 12. The school is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools and Southern Association of Independent Schools.[1]

History

Charlotte Country Day School was founded as an independent school in 1941 by headmaster Dr. Thomas Burton.[2] The school opened in September 1941 with 18 students matriculating.[3][4] By 1945 the Country Day included grades 1 – 8 and had an enrollment of 56 students on a six-acre school site on Sardis Road in suburban Charlotte.[4]

The estate of the Martin L. Cannon Jr. made a gift in 1958 that allowed the school to build a new eight building campus on a 30-acre site donated by Mr. and Mrs. James G. Harris on Carmel Road.[5] With the opening of the Cannon Campus, Country Day expanded to a K – 12 college preparatory school.[6] The new campus increased total enrollment capacity from 235 students to 400 students. In 1962 the school graduated its first class of 15 high school seniors.[4]

The advent of busing in the Charlotte Mecklenburg School system caused many independent schools in the region to experience rapid growth in the early 1970s.[7][8] Country Day had started in 1941 and was not founded in response to desegregation, but it saw an influx of hundreds of new applications during this period.[9] Journalists found it likely that its enrollment benefitted from parents seeking to avoid busing in the public school system.[10][11] By the 1974-75 school year, Country Day had grown to total enrollment of 873 students in grades K-12.[12]

In 1980 Country Day merged with Carmel Academy, one of several independent schools established in Mecklenburg County in the wake of the Swann decision in 1971.[13] The merger put Carmel Academy, previously operating with no endowment, on more secure financial footing.[14] After combining the schools, middle school grades 5 – 8 moved to the Carmel Academy campus (today referred to as the Bissell campus), about four miles away from the main Cannon campus. The newly combined school changed its mascot from the Rebels to the Buccaneers as part of the merger.[15][16]

Cannon campus

Cannon Campus for grades JK4 and 912 has 15 buildings, including a full-service dining hall, two libraries, a 400-seat theater, two reading gardens, and multiple computer labs.[17]

The Cannon campus was newly renovated at the end of 2018. The Purdy Math and Science building is the newest addition to the Cannon campus. A new state of the art gym, called Harris Performance Gym, featuring one of Charlotte’s first high school Jumbotrons, a pool, with a huge video board as a scoreboard, and a wonderful concourse. Country Day now has two active gyms, one for lower school PE, and another for varsity basketball games. [18]

Bissell campus

Bissell Campus, where CCDS students in grades 58 attend classes, underwent extensive renovations in 2009. The 23,000-square-foot (2,100 m2) Dowd Science Building was completed, which added eight science lecture/lab classrooms and two general purpose classrooms. The old science building was renovated to create six foreign language classrooms. Grounds enhancements included a new entryway and fencing, a new front courtyard, and new tennis courts and practice fields.[19] Margret and Smokey Bissell gave this campus. Elsewhere on Bissell Campus, the Sklut Center has three art rooms, the cafeteria, and the general music room. A separate building is dedicated entirely to the natural sciences.

Notable alumni

References

  1. "Charlotte Country Day School Profile" (PDF).
  2. "Country Day School To Buy Site". The Charlotte News. August 27, 1941.
  3. "STUART CRAMER HOME SELECTED". The Charlotte Observer. August 31, 1941.
  4. 1 2 3 "Our History - Charlotte Country Day". www.charlottecountryday.org. Retrieved August 5, 2020.
  5. "Day School Building". The Charlotte Observer. October 23, 1958.
  6. "Country Day Contract Is Awarded". The Charlotte Observer. November 13, 1959.
  7. Maniloff, Howard (November 20, 1972). "Schools' White Flight Slowing". The Charlotte Observer.
  8. Maniloff, Howard (November 20, 1972). "Schools' White Flight Slowing, Continued". The Charlotte Observer.
  9. Lassiter, Matthew T. (October 24, 2013). The Silent Majority: Suburban Politics in the Sunbelt South. Princeton University Press. pp. 165, 169. ISBN 9781400849420. Retrieved January 9, 2018.
  10. Nevin, David; Bills, Robert E (1976). The schools that fear built: segregationist academies in the South. Washington: Acropolis Books. p. 8. ISBN 0874911796. OCLC 2645093.
  11. Paddock, Polly (October 6, 1974). "Busing Spurs Growth In Private Schools". The Charlotte Observer.
  12. "Busing Spurs Growth In Private Schools". The Charlotte Observer. October 6, 1974.
  13. "Charlotte Country Day School | NCpedia". www.ncpedia.org. Retrieved August 5, 2020.
  14. Shepard, Charles E. (September 26, 1979). "Carmel Academy, Country Day Merging". The Charlotte Observer.
  15. "5 Things You May Not Know About Our Middle School". www.charlottecountryday.org. Retrieved August 6, 2020.
  16. Gaultney (September 27, 1980). "Country Day". The Charlotte News.
  17. "CCDS - Charlotte Country Day School: About Us » at a Glance". Archived from the original on September 2, 2011. Retrieved July 15, 2011.
  18. "Athletics - Independent Schools in NC| Charlotte Country Day". www.charlottecountryday.org. Retrieved January 5, 2024.
  19. "Grow. Build. Accelerate: The Campaign for Students Summary and 200809 Annual Giving Report." 2009, pg. 7.
  20. "Mike Cofer Stats". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved July 19, 2020.
  21. Brandon Miller - Men's Soccer - UNC Wilmington. uncwsports.com. Retrieved December 24, 2019.
  22. (March 14, 2018). Bonnell, Rick. Despite the losing, UNC-G stuck by their young coach. How Wes Miller led Spartans to NCAAs. The Charlotte Observer. Retrieved May 15, 2020.
  23. Candidate - Edwin B. Peacock III - Our Campaigns. Retrieved December 7, 2020.
  24. "Alvin Pearman Stats". Pro-Football-Reference.com. Retrieved July 19, 2020.
  25. Tripp Phillips - Men's Tennis - University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Retrieved December 7, 2020.

"CCDS". Charlotte Country Day school. Retrieved May 2, 2005.

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