Mount Aetna Academy was established in 1949 as a day school.[8] It offered education for grades 1-12. That first year there were 50 students enrolled in Grades 1-8 and 30 students enrolled in Grades 9-12.[9]
It was located at the present Mount Aetna Adventist Elementary School on Crystal Falls Drive.[10]
At a May, 1965, constituency meeting, the Chesapeake Conference of Seventh-day Adventists voted to build a fully accredited secondary boarding school.[11] On October 9, 1966, ground was broken for the first two buildings, Janel Kay DeHaan Hall and Hartle Hall. The Dehaan and Hartle families participated in this event.[12] The boarding phase of the school opened in the fall of 1967 with one hundred students enrolled. Two new dormitories had been constructed. The school continued to use the facilities of the former Mount Aetna Academy while the new campus was being completed.[13] In 1975, the administration building , was opened.[14] Four years later the gymnasium was built as a separate building.[15]
The cafeteria-music building was added in 1986 and named E & I Barr Hall in 1993.[16] In 1991 a library wing was added to the administration building which housed several classrooms and a computer lab. The Highland View Academy Church (Now Highland View Church) members moved into a new sanctuary on campus in 1993.[17]
Sports
Highland View Academy's athletic teams, known as the Tartans, compete in basketball,[18] soccer, and volleyball, track and field, and gymnastics.[19] In addition, there is a co-educational, non-competitive sports acrobatics team, the HVA Aerials. The HVA Aerials focus is promoting a Christian lifestyle through acrobatics and gymnastics, healthy living, positive teamwork, and smart life choices.[20]
^Crown, Katheryn (September 4, 1980). "Many pluses, few minuses in small Christian Schools"(PDF). Columbia Union Visitory. 85 (18). Takoma Park, MD: Columbia Union Conference of Seventh-day Adventists: 4–6. Includes picture of the school including the new gym.
^Coulter, J. Wayne (July 15, 1993). "Coutler's comments: A dream become a reality"(PDF). Columbia Union Visitor. 98 (14). Takoma Park, MD: Columbia Union Conference of Seventh-day Adventists: 25. Retrieved 2011-12-12.