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The Pascoag Grammar School, also previously the Burrillville High School, is a historic school building at 265 Sayles Avenue in the Pascoag village of Burrillville, Rhode Island. The Colonial Revival school was built in 1917 by Thomas McLaughlin and Mahoney & Coffey to replace a previous school that had burned.
Burrillville High School, Harrisville (a village of Burrillville) Central Falls High School, Central Falls; Cumberland High School, Cumberland; Lincoln Senior High School, Lincoln; North Providence High School, North Providence; North Smithfield High School, North Smithfield; Ponaganset High School, Glocester; Scituate High School, North Scituate
Beacon Charter High School for the Arts: Charter Woonsocket, Rhode Island: Burrillville High School Burrillville School District Burrillville, Rhode Island: Central High School: Providence School District: Providence, Rhode Island: Central Falls High School: Central Falls School District: Central Falls, Rhode Island: Classical High School ...
Instead of a logo, Burrillville’s helmets are adorned with the year the school began playing football. In the 90 years since, no school has won more football championships.
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For the outstanding year Eccleston received the Spencer Penrose Award and then stepped down from his position to devote more attention to being the school superintendent in Burrillville. [2] In 1987, after 32 years away, Eccleston returned to Burrillville High to coach the ice hockey team when it was in jeopardy and revived the program. [4]
Ponaganset High School: Foster-Glocester Regional School District Providence County, Rhode Island: North Scituate, Rhode Island: Portsmouth High School Portsmouth School District: Newport County, Rhode Island: Portsmouth, Rhode Island: Rogers High School: Newport School District Newport County, Rhode Island: Newport, Rhode Island: Scituate High ...
The name of Burrillville's principal village, Pascoag, named after the Pascoag River upon which it is located, probably derives from an Algonquian Indian root. The Nipmuc word for snake was rendered "askug" by Roger Williams in his A Key Into the Language of America, and "askoog" by the Reverend John Eliot in his Algonquian translation of the Bible.