19th century Massanutten Military Academy, named for the nearby
mountain, was established by the Virginia
Classis of the
Reformed Church in 1899. The school opened on September 12, 1899, with 40 students, half of whom were boarders.
20th century From the beginning the school was coed, with the first graduating class in 1902 consisting of three boys and three girls. In 1905, the first of two significant events in the history of the school occurred: Howard J. Benchoff was appointed the school president. He stayed in that position for nearly five decades, to be succeeded for the next decade and a half by his son.
Lantz Hall, the second structure on the academy grounds, was begun in 1907 and dedicated in 1909, to accommodate a growing student population. During the early years of his stewardship Benchoff established several policies. The first was expanding the school size to include number of students, staff, buildings, and acreage. The second, as a result of an otherwise undocumented "incident", was limiting the boarding department to boys beginning in 1910. The last policy, and the second significant event in the school's early history, was adopting a military program. While the program was not implemented until 1917, early in his tenure Benchoff described the goal of a military program as "to train the boys with a discipline that is valuable and give them that easy and graceful carriage which is an accomplishment in any gentleman's claim to culture" In 1930, after receiving an application and inspecting the existing program, the U.S. War Department formally made the school a
JROTC unit "placing it on a par with the highest rated military schools in the country".
21st century The school has a strong academic program with the graduating class of 2017, which consisted of 24 students, earning more than $2 million in scholarships alone. The school also has a strong STEM Program that focuses on experiential learning. ==Administration==