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The original Vincennes High School, built in 1897, was located at Fifth and Buntin Streets, near downtown Vincennes. An addition was built in 1916 on the corner of Sixth and Buntin, with another 20-room addition replacing the 1897 section in 1958. Over the years, the name Lincoln High School became the school's official name.
EVANSVILLE — Only one dozen high school football teams from Southwestern Indiana are still playing one week into the postseason. Below are scores for Friday's IHSAA sectional semifinal action ...
The Vincennes Alices were a minor league baseball team based in Vincennes, Indiana.. After the "Vincennes" team was briefly a member of the 1896 Kentucky-Indiana League, the "Alices" played as members of the Class D level Kentucky-Illinois-Tennessee League in the league's seasons of play between 1903 and 1913, with one season in the 1908 Eastern Illinois League.
The Southern Indiana Athletic Conference (SIAC) is a high school athletic conference based in Evansville, Indiana. Five of the conferences 10 schools; Bosse, Central, Harrison, North, and Reitz; comprise the public Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation. Mater Dei and Memorial are private Catholic high schools run by the Roman Catholic ...
Welcome to another Friday night of high school football. Below are scores for the Week 9 games around the Evansville area, plus links to online radio broadcasts where applicable.
October 25, 2024 at 6:00 PM. EVANSVILLE — High school football teams face the same options from here on out: Win or go home. Welcome to the postseason. The IHSAA tournament starts this week with ...
History. Simeon was founded in 1949, as Westcott Vocational High School in a building located at 8023 S. Normal Avenue. It operated until the Kroger company donated a vacant warehouse, located at 8235 S. Vincennes Avenue, to the Chicago Public Schools in 1963. The school was renamed Neal F. Simeon Vocational High School in September 1964.
The Indiana High School Athletic Association includes 427 member schools with 47 conferences. The largest conference is the Pocket Athletic with 13 schools. [1] Note 1: Boone Grove and South Central (Union Mills) compete in the Greater South Shore Conference as football-only members. They compete in all other sports in the Porter County Conference.