The school opened with grades one through seven in September 1967, the year Alabama public schools were forced to desegregate.[4][5] In 1973, the first graduation exercises were held. In a 1979 interview, headmaster William Garrison denied that it was founded as a segregation academy, as did all other private schools in Tuscaloosa, and said the school was "actively recruiting for blacks".[6] However, in 2021, Headmaster Bryan Oliver gave an interview acknowledging that the school was indeed founded as a segregation academy.[7]
It was initially housed in the Northington Army Hospital, in proximity to the University Mall, and had 113 students.[8] The property was state-owned, which stimulated protest by opponents.[9]
^Bagley, Joseph (December 15, 2018). The politics of white rights: race, justice, and integrating Alabama's schools. Athens: University of Georgia Press. p. 180. ISBN978-0-8203-5418-7. OCLC1065537539.