Rabun Gap-Nacoochee School
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Rabun Gap-Nacoochee School |
|
RGNS | |
Motto | Work, Study, Worship |
Established | 1903 |
Type | private co-educational |
Affiliation | |
Headmaster | John D. Marshall |
Dean | Dan Holtsclaw |
Founder | Andrew Jackson Ritchie |
Students | ~310 |
Grades | 6-12 |
Location | 339 Nacoochee Dr. Rabun Gap, GA United States |
Colors | White, Green and Gold |
Mascot | Eagles (formerly Indians) |
Newspaper | Mirror Images |
Website | www.rabungap.org |
Rabun Gap - Nacoochee School (RGNS) is a small, private college preparatory school located in the mountains of north Georgia. It is both a boarding and a day school.
[edit] History
Rabun Gap Industrial School was founded in 1905 by Andrew Jackson Ritchie and his wife Addie Corn Ritchie to provide education for the people of area. Andrew Jackson Ritchie was the first college graduate from Rabun County. The students of the school worked in addition to attending classes. They grew their own food as well as maintaining the campus. After a fire in 1926 at the Nacoochee Institute the two schools merged. Nacoochee Institute was started by Presbyterian missionary Reverend Joel Wade in 1903 in nearby Sautee. John Knox Coit later became the headmaster and developed a curriculum based on the classical education tradition.
RGNS had a Junior College Program for several years and operated simultaneously as a private boarding school and a local public school for residents as late as the 1970s.