Durham Academy was founded in 1933 as the Calvert Method School by
George Watts Hill and his wife Ann McCullough Hill. The couple established the school as a private, independent school to educate their children. The school's teaching philosophy (and its name) was based on the
Calvert School in
Baltimore, which Mrs. Hill attended as a child. The Calvert Method School's first home was in the original home of Hill's grandfather,
George Washington Watts, who had moved into the larger
Harwood Hall. The school was later run in Durham's
Forest Hills neighborhood, with the neighborhood's clubhouse serving as a classroom for seven students and one teacher. In August 2002, Durham Academy's Preschool and Lower School moved to 17.01 acres on the Ridge Road campus. The building that was just opened has been recognized by the
Chicago Athenaeum: Museum of Architecture and Design for its style. Durham Academy received widespread press on February 12, 2014, after school administrators used rap music in a video announcing that the school would be closed due to snow. In 2015, Durham Academy's auditioned
a cappella group, XIV Hours, released a video entitled "Lost in the Game" that discussed the sexual nature of many popular song lyrics. The video quickly became popular and was covered in several major news sites, including MTV and the Huffington Post. The music video was also nominated for Best High School Video in the 2016 CASA A Capella Video awards. ==Academics==