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Porter-Gaud School | |
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Address | |
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300 Albemarle Rd 29407 United States | |
Coordinates | 32°46′27″N 79°57′51″W / 32.77417°N 79.96417°W |
Information | |
Type | Private |
Motto | Fides, Honor, Scientia (Faith, Honor, Knowledge) |
Established | 1867 |
Headmaster | DuBose Egleston |
Faculty | 120 |
Grades | K2–12 |
Number of students | 1,004 |
Campus | 88 acres (360,000 m2) |
Color(s) | Garnet and gray |
Mascot | Cyclone |
Rival | Bishop England High School |
Yearbook | Polygon |
Endowment | $12.5m |
Affiliation | Episcopal Church |
Website |
www |
The Porter-Gaud School is an independent coeducational college preparatory day school in Charleston, in the U.S. state of South Carolina. Porter-Gaud has an enrollment of about 1000 students, comprising an elementary school, middle school, and high school, and is located on the banks of the Ashley River. The school has historic ties to the Episcopal Church.
Porter-Gaud was formed in July 1964 from the merger of three schools: The Porter Military Academy (founded 1867), the Gaud School for Boys (founded 1908), and the Watt School (founded 1931). The legal name of the institution remains The Porter Academy.
From 1972 to the early 1980s, physical science teacher and athletic advisor Eddie Fischer sexually abused at least twenty students at Porter-Gaud and nineteen at other Charleston, SC schools. In 1982, in response to complaints about Fischer's sexual behavior, the administration of Porter-Gaud asked Fischer to resign. Both Principal James Bishop Alexander and Headmaster Berkeley Grimball then helped Fischer to get a job at another private school, where he continued to abuse. In April 1999, Fischer was sentenced to twenty years in prison for thirteen sexual-abuse charges. [1]
In October 2000, following Fischer's incarceration, a court determined that former Principal James Bishop Alexander and Headmaster Berkeley Grimball knew of the ongoing abuse by Fischer. [2] The jury deemed both negligent in stopping the abuse. Neither Principal Alexander nor Headmaster Grimball were ultimately convicted, as each died prior to the court concluding. [2] However, the court awarded the plaintiffs $105 million.
The scandal was the subject of a 2018 documentary, What Haunts Us. The film suggests the suicides of six graduates of the 1979 class were due to the mental impact of being sexually abused by Fischer. [2] The colluding culture of the school with board members ignoring persistent pleas to be heard by one victim, who wrote to all the board members who never responded or discussed it, revealed that these young victims were trapped within a culture where the surface of respectability had to be maintained at all costs. [2] Porter-Gaud school did make a public apology but not to the victims themselves. [3]