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Hiawatha High School (HHS) teaches grades 9-12, and is located at 600 Red Hawk Drive. Their mascot is the Red Hawks (changed from Redskins after 2000), and the school colors are red and blue. The campus lies on the far east side of Hiawatha. The architecture is in circular form, with a domed circular gym nicknamed "The Roundhouse."
The Hiawatha Athletics were a minor league baseball team based in Hiawatha, Kansas. In 1912, the Athletics played as members of the Class D level Missouri-Iowa-Nebraska-Kansas League . The Athletics were immediately precedec in minor league play by the 1910 Hiawatha Indians, who played the season as a member of the short-lived Class D level ...
Robinson is a part of USD 415 Hiawatha Schools. The Hiawatha High School mascot is Hiawatha Red Hawks. [12] Robinson High School was closed through school unification. The Robinson High School mascot was Cardinals. [13]
Hiawatha Township covers an area of 63.57 square miles (164.6 km 2) and contains one incorporated settlement, Hiawatha (the county seat). According to the USGS, it contains one cemetery, Mount Hope. The stream of North Fork Wolf River runs through this township.
Brown County is a county located in the northeastern portion of the U.S. state of Kansas.Its county seat and most populous city is Hiawatha. [3] As of the 2020 census, the county population was 9,508. [1]
Here’s a look at the Kansas Jayhawks’ schedule for Big 12 men’s hoops this season. Skip to main content. 24/7 Help. For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us. Sign ...
The regiment was originally organized in 1917 after the United States entry into World War I as the 1st Field Artillery of the Kansas National Guard. Later that year, it mustered into Federal service and was reorganized as the 130th Field Artillery, fighting with the 35th Division in the American Expeditionary Forces in France.
KNZA-FM was originally built by Mike Carter in 1977, in a field 6 miles south of Hiawatha, Kansas.Carter and his staff stressed personalized rapport with the listening audience, with a country music and farm information format, and quickly built a faithful audience at a time when few cars or homes had FM radios.