Darlington to move all grades onto one campus, sell Lower School property to Shorter
by perss release
Feb 15, 2013 | 6532 views | 8 8 comments | 20 20 recommendations | email to a friend | print
Thornwood at Darlington Lower School’s campus on Shorter Avenue was built by Col. Alfred Shorter in the 1830s. The historic building also served as the home of the Thornwood School for Girls. (Brittany Hannah, RN-T.com)
Thornwood at Darlington Lower School’s campus on Shorter Avenue was built by Col. Alfred Shorter in the 1830s. The historic building also served as the home of the Thornwood School for Girls. (Brittany Hannah, RN-T.com)
slideshow
Darlington School has announced plans to move grades PK-4 to the main campus at the end of the current school year and sell its property on Shorter Avenue to Shorter University.

The trustees of both institutions approved the agreement unanimously this afternoon.

“This is a tremendous win for Darlington,” said Headmaster Tom Whitworth. “The fact is, we will be able to deliver a better product with all of our students and teachers here on one campus. As always, safety is our primary concern, and there is no doubt that securing one campus is easier and more efficient than securing two. This is a huge opportunity for us to truly become one school.”

Click here to read a story by Doug Walker about Thornwood's history.

With the move, Darlington PK-8 Director James Hutchins will no longer have to split his time between two campuses, but can instead maximize his time building a true PK-8 model that lends itself to better communication, curriculum continuity, the vertical alignment of teaching and learning, as well as enhance the connections between students and teachers PK-12.

“This is really exciting,” Dr. Hutchins said. “The opportunities to capitalize on the synergies between teachers and students at all levels are endless. The Lower School already does a great job of collaborating between grade levels and subjects, but being on the same campus with the rest of our student body – including students from 42 countries and 22 states – will allow us to provide an abundance of unique learning experiences for all.”

Grades 3 and 4 will move into Thatcher Hall with grades 5-8, while the Early Learning Academy and grades 1 and 2 will be temporarily housed in modular classrooms. All grades will share Thatcher Hall’s state-of-the-art facilities, including the Johnson Assembly Hall, the Ledbetter Commons, the Joanne G. Yancey Library, the Courtyard, Morgan Pavilion and Charlie Davidson Field. Plans are to build a permanent structure once the Lower School Transition Committee, chaired by Associate Headmaster James Milford, has determined the ideal size and scope of the facility.

“We have already settled on a preliminary site, located behind the archway in Thatcher Hall’s Courtyard at the foot of the mountain,” said Beth Pollard, Darlington chief financial officer.

“James and the committee will spend the next 12 to 18 months talking with students, teachers and parents in order to identify our needs just as we did before Thatcher Hall was constructed.”

Jere Drummond (’57), chairman of Darlington’s Board of Trustees, added that the school’s primary reason for engaging Shorter specifically was the desire to protect the Lower School site and, particularly, the Thornwood Building, which was built by Shorter University founder Col. Alfred Shorter in the late 1840s. The home of Thornwood School from 1958 to 1973 – the all-girls prep school that merged with Darlington to create the co-educational institution we are today – the Thornwood Building currently serves as administrative offices and classroom space. As part of our agreement, Shorter will make every effort to have Thornwood added to the National Register of Historic Places within the next 18 months.

“While moving the lower grades to the main campus has been part of Darlington’s Campus Master Plan for nearly a decade, it was very important to us to find a buyer that would appreciate the historic value of Thornwood,” Drummond said. “Thornwood alumnae care very deeply for their alma mater and have donated hundreds of thousands of dollars toward the restoration of the property, the naming of a female residence hall on the main campus in honor of Thornwood, and the endowment of the Thornwood Scholarship. And while Thornwood will always be part of Darlington, it was important to us to ensure that the place these women so fondly remember is protected. To this end, Shorter is the ideal partner because it also has a stake in Thornwood’s history.”

Shorter University President Don Dowless sees this partnership as a win for Shorter as well. “We are excited about adding Col. and Mrs. Shorter’s home and the adjacent property to our campus,” he said. “In the 1870s, the Shorters’ support was so crucial to the success of the college that the institution was renamed in their honor. We are proud that their legacy will live on in a new, tangible way and that our students, faculty and staff will benefit from it.”

Shorter expanded its Rome campus in 2009, locating its School of Nursing in the Riverbend Center and its Robert H. Ledbetter College of Business in the Midtown Crossing Shopping Center.

“The addition of the Thornwood property, which is adjacent to our main campus, will provide additional academic and athletic space that will enhance our campus community,” Dr. Dowless said. “This addition also increases our footprint along Shorter Avenue and gives us even more of a presence within the Rome Community.”

Click here to read additional press releases on RN-T.com.
Comments
(8)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
Almost_Anonymous
|
February 17, 2013
Does anyone know the purchase price and terms (all cash, cash note, etc?)

Thanks
Almost_Anonymous
|
February 18, 2013
If the purchase price and terms are right, this is a good move for both schools.
freckled-husky
|
February 16, 2013
I wonder how all the parents of current PreK - 1st grade students will feel about paying $10K in tuition for their children to go to school in trailers. The interesting thing is that the email sent out talks about building a new lower school but this article and the press release talk about building one only if it makes sense financially.

I can not see too many parents feeling too good about this decision. And I am one of them.
HP10
|
February 20, 2013
I am a parent that is very proud of Darlington's decision to secure our children in an area which is possible to do so! I have never seen Darlington do anything 1/2 way so I am sure the pods will be very nice while they build the new facility. I would expect they will be even nicer than the current classrooms. I am paying for a great education, security for my child and not for a historical building.
WWrome
|
February 15, 2013
What a travesty that Darlington sold one of the most historic properties in Rome to a bunch of looney tune fanatics. Do we really trust that will respect its historical integrity? What if a gay person lived there or, God forbid, someone consumed alcohol. That will be reason to burn it down and put up a statue of their great leader Dr Kim il Dowless.

As my Dad always said, you better keep your hand on your wallet when the person you are negotiating with talks about God in every other sentence.

Did Darlington even try to sell the property to a private individual who would have definitely respected its historic integrity and not been an embarrassment to this great town? Not to my knowledge.
CoachMoon
|
February 15, 2013
WWrome - As a former teacher who lived in an apartment in the Thornwood building for several years, I can assure you that alcohol was consumed there! Negative on the gayness, but there was a litle bit of heterosexual sinning :)
Trelicious
|
February 16, 2013
Who lived in this house when built? anyone?
acct101
|
February 16, 2013
Trelicious, the home was built for Col. Alfred Shorter and his wife in the 1800’s. Doug Walker wrote an article on the history of Thornwood a couple of weeks or so ago entitled “Thornwood Iconic in Rome”. You can search this site under news-local for Thornwood and find it. It is interesting and worth your time. I really think it is fitting that it will be returned to Shorter University, but I agree with WWRome about the current admin. Maybe they will not last much longer.
Postings are not edited and are the responsibility of the author. You agree not to post comments that are abusive, threatening or obscene. Postings may be removed at our discretion.