Twiggs Academy was established in 1970 as a segregation academy[2] At a 1970 fundraiser for the school, Georgia governor Lester Maddox urged "citizens, local officials, church leaders and educators in every community where the federal police has moved in to destroy public education to move immediately to organize, develop and do what they must to provide their own system of education."[3]
Twiggs Academy was one of forty-one private schools chartered in Georgia between October 1969, and June 1970.[4]
Twiggs Academy competes in baseball, men's and women's basketball, football, softball, and track. Twiggs Academy participates in the Georgia Independent School Association (GISA), and the Independent Christian Schools of Georgia and Alabama (ICSGA).[5] The Trojans are a member of GISA Region 2 A.[6]
Although Twiggs Academy competes in GISA in all other sports, the Trojans play football in the Independent Christian Schools of Georgia and Alabama, a Christian league consisting of teams from Georgia, Florida, and Alabama.[8]
Previously Twiggs Academy played football in GISA. The Trojans fell to Eagle's Landing Christian Academy in the 1996-1997 GISA Championship game.[9]
Rivalry
Historically, Twiggs Academy's biggest rivalries have been with Citizens Christian Academy. In the mid-90s TA also had rivalries with Flint River Academy and Fullington Academy.
Twiggs Academy won its region in literary in 1994 and 1995.
One-act play
Twiggs Academy competes in GISA one-act play and won the event in its region in 2009.
Twiggs Academy won state in Class A of one-act plays in 2010.[10]
Campus
A large gymnasium; a modern media center and science lab; a library; baseball, softball, and football fields; and a cafeteria are located on campus.[11]
^ abHansen, Jane (October 2, 1987). "Private schools flourishing as public schools languish". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. p. 11A. Like hundreds of other private schools in the South, Twiggs Academy was spawned as a "seg academy" in reaction to court-ordered integration. While in recent years the academy has maintained an open-door policy, no blacks have ever attended. "They can come if they have the money," headmaster Jack Lucas said. But Sinclair Washington, president of the Twiggs County chapter of the NAACP, says the school remains an unwelcome haven for whites who don't want their children in a classroom with blacks. "Integration was something they didn't want to accept," he said.