
Visionaries from the Metropolitan and Emmanuel Brinklow Seventh-day
Adventist Churches, along with the Allegheny East Conference of
Seventh-day Adventists saw the need for a Christ-centered school which
would be sensitive and responsive to the uniqueness of black students,
in particular, and diversity-minded families, in general, and
conveniently located in the northern section of the Washington, DC
metropolitan area.
Under the sponsorship of those two churches, (later joined by the First
Seventh-day Adventist Church of Washington, DC), the doors of George E.
Peters Seventh-day Adventist School opened in September of 1987. This
accomplishment was the result of years of dreaming, praying, talking
and deciding; and two intense years of fundraising, strategizing,
meeting and working.
The school's first location was the Metropolitan Adventist Church
building. Four teachers - one serving as principal, staffed 68 students
in grades 1-8.
In one year, the enrollment doubled! At the end of just six years, the
overcrowded school, with its bulging waiting list, made it necessary to
move into a newly constructed school building which could house a
maximum of 250 students. The new building had ten classrooms, a fully
equipped science lab, library, computer lab, multi-purpose room for
lunch and assemblies, music studio for private music lessons, teachers'
work room/lounge, and an administrative office complex. There is ample
playground and parking space.
The staff of certified teachers, individual students, and the school as
a whole, have several awards for achievements in academics and the arts.
The history of the school is still unfolding. You are invited to be a
part of the legacy and promise of George E. Peters Adventist School.
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