Sciotoville Community School

Sciotoville Community School (a.k.a. East High School)
Location

224 Marshall Avenue

Sciotoville, Ohio
United States
Coordinates 38°45′31″N 82°53′18″W / 38.758611°N 82.888333°W / 38.758611; -82.888333Coordinates: 38°45′31″N 82°53′18″W / 38.758611°N 82.888333°W / 38.758611; -82.888333
Information
Type high school
Established 1927
School district Sciotoville Community School
Principal

Rodney Walker, Superintendent Mike Yeagle, Principal

Adam Bailey, Athletic Director
Grades 5–12
Color(s) Blue and White [1]
Athletics baseball, boys' and girls' basketball, football, boys' golf, fast pitch softball, boys' and girls' swimming, boys' tennis, boys' and girls' track, and volleyball [1]
Athletics conference Southern Ohio Conference [1]
Mascot Tartans [1]
Website District Website

Sciotoville Community School is a charter school in Sciotoville (within the city limits of Portsmouth), Scioto County, Ohio, United States. It is also known as East High School. Their mascot is the Tartans and their colors are blue and white/Gray. In 2000, East High School was supposed to be closed by the City of Portsmouth, but with public effort, they were able to convert the high school to a community school.

Athletics

There are ten school districts and eleven high schools in Scioto County along with one parochial school as well several private and community schools.[2] The school's athletic affiliation is with the Ohio High School Athletic Association (OHSAA) and the Southern Ohio Conference (SOC), which has sixteen member schools and is divided into two divisions (SOC I & SOC II) based on the schools' enrollment. The SOC includes teams from four different Ohio counties - Jackson County (Oak Hill High School), Lawrence County (Symmes Valley High School), Pike County (Waverly High School, Eastern High School, and Western High School), and Scioto County (Clay High School, Green High School, Glenwood High School, Sciotoville Community School, Valley High School, Northwest High School, Minford High School, Portsmouth West High School, Notre Dame High School, South Webster High School, and Wheelersburg High School).[3]

For the first time in their 97-year history, East High School will have its own football and tennis athletic facilities in 2007. The Portsmouth city council sold Allard Park, a former city-owned park where the Tartans have played their contests, to the Sciotoville Community School for $1.[4][5][6] In the ceremony, Bill Shope, Sciotoville Community School's governing body president, gave Jim Kalb, Portsmouth's mayor, a 1921 silver dollar representing the date in which Sciotoville became a part of Portsmouth.[7]

Ohio High School Athletic Association championships and appearances

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 OHSAA. "OHSAA Member School Info". Retrieved 2007-05-10.
  2. Ohio Department of Development. "Ohio County Profiles: Scioto County" (PDF). Retrieved 2007-05-11.
  3. Southern Ohio Conference (January 2007). "Southern Ohio Conference Constitution and By-laws".
  4. Ryan Scott Ottney (2007-07-16). "Park Plans". Retrieved 2007-07-16.
  5. Mike Reateria (2007-07-15). "Sciotoville Schools Obtain Allard Park". Retrieved 2007-07-16.
  6. Terri Fowler (2007-07-12). "Allard Park officially home to East High School Tartans". The Scioto Voice.
  7. Jeff Barron (2007-07-18). "President says Allard Park ownership brings credibility". Portsmouth Daily Times. Retrieved 2007-07-18.
  8. Yappi. "Yappi Sports Baseball". Retrieved 2007-02-12.
  9. OHSAA. "Ohio High School Athletic Association Web site". Retrieved 2006-12-31.

See also

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