The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Marist’s history goes back more than 100 years

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Q: What is the history of The Marist School in Brookhaven?

A: The private, college prep academy for grades seven through 12 opened in downtown Atlanta in 1901. The Marist School was founded by the Society of Mary, a congregati­on within the Roman Catholic Church that strives to live by the principles of Mary, the mother of Jesus.

Marists, the name for the society’s members, formed their congregati­on in Lyon, France, in 1816. The group spread to the United States during the Civil War, and by 1897, they had made their way to Atlanta, where they built a church and began developing a new parish of Georgian followers.

Father John E. Gunn, the church’s pastor, wanted to create an academy for the city’s Catholic residents, so in the summer of 1901 he purchased the lot next to his church. By the fall, the Marist School, then called Marist Academy, opened on Ivy Street, near where Peachtree Street now crosses over I-85.

The school had 32 students its first year, all male, but Marist was technicall­y amilitary academy those years, committed to both its junior ROTC programand the Society of Mary’s teachings.

Over the next six decades, the student body began to outgrow its campus. The academy moved in 1962 to the Ashford- Dunwoody Road location.

Father William Rowland, the school’s current president, told the AJC the move was much needed. The building lacked the resources to accommodat­e its 350-plus students and the football team was forced to practice on a clay fifield.

Marist’s location wasn’t the only thing that changed that year. In 1962, Atlanta’s Catholic schools began to desegregat­e, and Marist began accepting African-American students. The academy’s current student body is 7 percent African-American, 7 percent Hispanic/Latino, 3 percent Asian and 3 percent multiracia­l, which are figures that Rowland said he would like to see increase.

It wasn’t until 1976, when the ROTC program was discontinu­ed, that the school began to admit female students. Marist nowhas about 1,100 students, about half of whom are female.

Alumni have become entreprene­urs, broadcaste­rs and profession­al athletes, including NBA announcer Ernie Johnson Jr., How Stuff Works founder Marshall Brain and Los Angeles Rams coach Sean McVay. Rowland confifirme­d that actor David Hasselhoff attended the acad- emy for a few years during the ’60s, although he graduated from a different high school.

Rowland said along with academic, athletic and art accomplish­ments, its faculty and alumni have made contributi­ons to the Church, to Atlanta and to the nation.

“When our students leave here, they’re certainly well-prepared for college, but we also want them to leave with a strong sense of their faith, a strong commitment to justice and a sense of mission — that there’s more to life than only making money, it’s also about changing the world as God intended,” he said.

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