Youngstown City Series

The Youngstown City Series was an OHSAA athletic conference that began play in 1925 and lasted until the end of the 2006–07 school year. Its members were located in the city of Youngstown, Ohio (including all Youngstown City School District high schools), although membership was eventually extended to Timken High School in Canton, Ohio. Some of the schools closed during the league's tenure, while the rest left prior to the closings or at the league's demise.

Members

The traditional Youngstown members of the YCS. Canton Timken is not shown.
School Nickname Colors Address[1] Type Membership Years
Cardinal Mooney Cardinals Red, Gold
   
2545 Erie St.
Youngstown, OH 44507
Private, Catholic, Co-Ed 1958–1970 (left for SVC)
Chaney Cowboys Red, Gray
   
731 S. Hazelwood Ave.
Youngstown, OH 44509
Public 1960–2003 (left for SVC)
East Golden Bears Blue, Gold
   
474 Bennington Ave.
Youngstown, OH 44506
Public 1925–1998 (closed)
North Bulldogs Red, Black
   
Liberty Rd.
Youngstown, OH 44505
Public 1925–1980 (closed)
Rayen Tigers Orange, Black
   
250 Benita Ave.
Youngstown, OH 44504
Public 1925–2003 (left for SVC)
South Warriors Red, Blue
   
1833 Market St.
Youngstown, OH 44507
Public 1925–1993 (closed)
Woodrow Wilson Presidents (1936–1958)
Redmen (1958–2003)
Red, White
   
2725 Gibson St.
Youngstown, OH 44502
Public 1936–2003 (left for SVC)
Ursuline Fighting Irish Green, Gold
   
750 Wick Ave.
Youngstown, OH 44505
Private, Catholic, Co-Ed 1958–1970 (left for SVC)
Timken Trojans Blue, Gold
   
521 Tuscarawas St. W.
Canton, OH 44702
Public 1999–2003 (left for PAC-8)
  • Note: During this time, East High School was known as the "Golden Bears" and wore the colors of blue and gold. The school closed as a high school in 1998 and when it reopened in 2007, the students chose to be the "Panthers", as well as having school colors of light blue and silver. In 2017, East HS returned to using the Golden Bears nickname and the former school colors of blue and gold.[2]

The legacy of all six Youngstown public high schools was to be honored with pennants for each school (Chaney, East, North, Rayen, South, & Wilson) to fly at the newly-renovated Rayen Stadium, which had its field named for Rayen alum Jack Antonucci in 2012.[3] The stadium had originally been built in 1924 and was serving as the playing surface for JV, Freshmen, and Middle School football games since the last regular season varsity home game for a Youngstown City School in 1993.

League champions

References

Further reading

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