Upper Iowa Conference

The Upper Iowa Conference is a high school athletic conference in Iowa made up of 1A and 2A schools in northeastern Iowa. It is currently a nine team league. It has the current sports: volleyball, boys and girls basketball, golf, cross country, boys and girls track and field, baseball, softball, and wrestling. Postville is the only school that competes in soccer.

Upper Iowa Conference School Locations in Iowa
Upper Iowa Conference
Established1938
AssociationIHSAA / IGHSAU
Members9
Sports fielded
  • 15
RegionNortheast Iowa
Websitehttps://www.upperiowaconference.org/

History

The conference was formed in 1938 by West Union of the Northeast Iowa Conference, Monona, Postville, Maynard, Sumner, and Fayette school districts. Waukon and Elkader would join in 1940. Monona would leave the following year. Elgin joined in 1949, and would consolidate with Clermont to form Clermont-Elgin in 1954. In 1958, Maynard would be renamed West Central and Clermont-Elgin would consolidate again, this time with Wadena to form Valley-CEW. West Union would consolidate with Hawkeye and Alpha in 1960 to form North West Union.[1]

After Waukon left to join larger schools in the Northeast Iowa Conference in 1968, they were replaced by M-F-L of Monona, who was a part of the Upper Mississippi Conference. Elkader would rename themselves to Central Elkader in 1969. North High and Fayette also merged to become North Fayette High School in 1986.

Eventually, in 1987, with the fall of the Upper Mississippi Conference, Kee High School and Mar-Mac opted to join the Upper Iowa Conference. Guttenberg would join the same year, leaving the Mid-East Conference. Wapsie Valley and Turkey Valley also joined the league after disbanding the Cedar-Waspie Conference, pushing membership to 13. M-F-L and Mar-Mac would consolidate in 1992 and North Winneshiek would be added to the conference in 1994. Garnavillo also joined following the fall of the Mid-East Conference. In 1998, Wapsie Valley in Fairbank left for the NICL (North Iowa Cedar League).

Garnavillo and Guttenberg merged districts, becoming Clayton Ridge in 1999.[2] North Winneshiek closed its high school upon entering into a whole-grade sharing agreement with Decorah for grades 9–12 in 2002. Sumner consolidates with Fredericksburg, who was a apart of the Iowa Star Conference, to form Sumner-Fredericksburg in 2004. In 2012 the Upper Iowa Conference expanded south and added Starmont and Edgewood–Colesburg (Ed-Co). In 2013 North Fayette and Valley-CEW decided to go into a whole-grade sharing agreement, bringing the total of teams in the conference down to 12. In the 2014–15 school year, Sumner-Fredericksburg began to competing in the North Iowa Cedar League, dropping the number of schools in the conference to 11.

Beginning in the 2017–18 school year Edgewood–Colesburg left the UIC to return to their original conference, the Tri-Rivers Conference. Following the departure of Edgewood–Colesburg, Starmont will leave the next year in 2018-19 to join the Tri-Rivers Conference also. The departure of the two schools will drop the total number of Upper Iowa Conference schools to nine.

Members

School name Location Mascot Colors Enrollment
(2017–18)
Football class
Central Elkader Warriors     95 8-Player
Clayton Ridge Guttenberg Eagles     141 A
Kee Lansing K-Hawks     89 8-Player
MFL-MarMac Monona Bulldogs     156 A
North Fayette Valley West Union Tigerhawks     240 2A
Postville Postville Pirates     137 A
South Winneshiek Calmar Warriors     141 A
Turkey Valley Jackson Junction Trojans     86 8-Player
West Central Maynard Blue Devils     57 8-Player

Former members

School name Location Mascot Colors Current athletic conference Year departed
Waukon Waukon Indians     Northeast Iowa Conference 1970
Wapsie Valley Fairbank Warriors     North Iowa Cedar League 1996
Sumner-Fredericksburg Sumner Cougars     North Iowa Cedar League 2014
Edgewood–Colesburg Edgewood Vikings     Tri-Rivers Conference 2017
Starmont Arlington Stars     Tri-Rivers Conference 2018

References

  1. "Upper Iowa Conference". Iowa High School Sports. Retrieved 2020-08-27.
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