North Marion High School (West Virginia)

North Marion High School is a public high school in Farmington, West Virginia, United States. It is one of three high schools in Marion County. The other two are Fairmont Senior High School and East Fairmont High School.[3]

North Marion High School
Address
1 North Marion Drive

, ,
26571

United States
Coordinates39°30′39″N 80°18′4″W
Information
School typePublic coeducational
Opened1979
School districtMarion County
SuperintendentGary Price[1]
PrincipalRusselle DeVito
Faculty45.00 (FTE)[2]
Grades9-12
Age14 to 18
Enrolment712 (2018–19)[2]
Average class size25-30
Student to teacher ratio15.82[2]
Campus typeClosed
Color(s)Black & silver   
MascotHusky
NicknameRachel Rowdies
Team name'Huskies'
YearbookNorth Star
Feeder schoolsMannington Middle School
Monongah Middle School
Barrackville Middle School
Fairview Middle School
Websitewww.marionboe.com/NorthMarion

The school is classified as "AA", and it has an enrollment of 851 students as of 2020.[4]

History and location

North Marion High School was completed and opened in September, 1979.[5] The school is a consolidated high school made up of four former high schools that closed in the consolidation: Barrackville, Monongah, Mannington and Fairview. With over 1,600 students, was at the time one of the largest high schools in West Virginia. Farmington High School, which closed in 1975 because of structural problems caused by mine subsidence, is often considered to be part of the consolidated group (even though it had been closed prior to the building of the new school). The four former high schools were converted to middle schools, with all four buildings remaining in current use. One of which, Mannington Middle is the oldest currently used school in West Virginia, opening in 1902.

North Marion High School is located approximately fours miles from Farmington, West Virginia on US Route 250 north. While it is closer to the city of Mannington, West Virginia, and is often considered to be located in Rachel, West Virginia, the school mailing address is Farmington. Rachel is a small coal mining community located adjacent to the school, and is an unincorporated municipality.

Nickname & Colors

North Marion students, teams and alumni are known as Huskies. The school colors are black and silver. The mascot and colors were chosen by the students of the various consolidated high schools in an election in the spring of 1979. For the first several years the students enjoyed an unofficial “Husky Lunch” consisting of a Moon pie and an RC Cola until outside vending was closed.

Athletics & Academics

After completion of the original facility, the building process continued sporadically. A local group calling themselves the "Wood Cutters" completed, with mostly volunteer labor and materials, the addition of a facilities building, football stadium, practice field and softball field. Without the work and efforts of the volunteers, many of the improvements of the school would not have been possible and the continued improvement of the grounds has become a source of community pride. The school continues to enjoy strong local fan and booster support. In 2014, turf was added to Husky Field. And a Track and Field track was built in 2015.

State Championship History[6]
Boys' Sports State Titles Girls' Sports State Titles
BaseballSoftball
Basketball1999Basketball2009, 2010, 2011, 2018
Cross Country1992, 1994, 1995, 2005Cross Country1993
GolfCheerleading1988, 1990, 1994, 1995
Football1980, 1981, 1997Volleyball
SoccerSoccer
SwimmingSwimming
TennisTennis
Track & FieldTrack & Field2014
Wrestling1998
Boys' Total9Girls' Total10

The school is represented as "Grantville High School" in the popular alternative history novel 1632 by writer Eric Flint. The novel is set in the fictional town of Grantville, which is based on the real town and surroundings of Mannington.[7]

Notable alumni

References

  1. http://timeswv.com/editorials/x1999357144/Gary-Price-strong-as-superintendent-in-position-to-bring-stability-to-schools
  2. "North Marion High School". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved October 5, 2020.
  3. "Marion County Schools". Marion County Schools. Retrieved 2020-09-10.
  4. http://wvde.state.wv.us/ed_directory/index.html?county_id=47&school_id=503
  5. Virginian, Stephanie Panny | Times West. "North Marion to dedicate its field to Hall of Fame coach Roy Michael, the Woodcutters". Times West Virginian. Retrieved 2020-09-13.
  6. WVSSAC Archived 2010-09-06 at the Wayback Machine
  7. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-09-27.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  8. http://mgoblue.com/football/coachbio.aspx?id=42166
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