mission & history

Mission:   Transforming lives and inspiring community through outstanding and
               accessible arts education.



History

Henry Bridges founded Community School of the Arts in 1969, when he served
as the organist and choir director of First Presbyterian Church in downtown Charlotte.  
The program was born after Henry realized that the Church had fifteen unused pianos 
in its basement and that it was surrounded in its urban neighborhood by children
who could benefit from --- but could never afford --- high-quality music lessons.  
 
Henry recruited four of the finest piano teachers in Charlotte as his faculty, and from
more than 150 student applications, he accepted twenty children into the School's inaugural year. 
Students received instruction free of charge five days a week, including two piano lessons,
supervised practice, choir, sight singing and music theory.  The quality of the instruction
was exceptional, and Community School of the Arts rapidly expanded to offer tuition-based 
programs for families who could pay for lessons, in addition to the School's free and discounted
outreach programs.

Henry Bridges remained the executive director of the School until 1982, when he stepped
away from administrative duties and became a full time piano teacher in the Piedmont Courts
Public Housing Project. Henry brought his personal piano to the site and taught free weekly lessons
to dozens of Piedmont Courts students. Henry retired from teaching in 1992 but remains an active
lifetime member of the School’s Board of Directors.

In 1998, the School, which had long been an independent nonprofit housed at the Church,
moved to new offices and studios at Spirit Square, providing a high profile downtown location
for School programs. Spirit Square anchors a network of more than a dozen satellite locations
across Charlotte, reaching students from all neighborhoods and more than 65 ZIP codes 
each year. The School has achieved a singular balance between its public programs,
for which hundreds of middle class and affluent families pay tuition, and its outreach programs,
which are free to participants. From twenty students a month in 1969, the School has grown to
serve more than 1,875 per month, and from four faculty members, the School has grown to
employ 43 dedicated instructors.

Through the School’s nearly four decades, its programs have changed and expanded
based on community demand, at times including dance, theatre and extensive school-based
classes. As it celebrates its 40th anniversary, the School now concentrates on instruction
in music and the visual arts, offering private and group music lessons, visual arts classes and
workshops, summer camps, pottery classes and early childhood arts education. And, as it has
every year since its founding, Community School of the Arts teaches extensively in low-income 
neighborhoods and provides significant student financial assistance, honoring its founding
mission and the belief that outstanding arts education should be available to all.
 
345 N. College Street, Suite 413
Charlotte, NC 28202
Phone: 704.377.4187 -- Fax: 704.377.1132

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