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Lowell High School in 1917 at Hayes and Masonic streets. In 1894, because the name Boys' High School was not in accord with the growing number of girls taking its college-preparatory classes, the school was renamed to honor the distinguished poet James Russell Lowell, chiefly through the efforts of Pelham W. Ames, a member of the school board.
Below is a list of Massachusetts state and regional high school football champions sanctioned by the Massachusetts Interscholastic Athletic Association since the organization began holding state championship games in 1972. [1] From 1972 to 2012, only regional champions were crowned.
The team plays its home games on an artificial-turf field at historic Cawley Memorial Stadium, located in the Belvidere section of Lowell. In 2014, the NPSL team also played in Bedford and Lawrence, but Cawley is now the permanent home to GLUFC's top team. The junior team plays BSSL matches at Greater Lowell Technical High School.
In September 1932, the Australian Cricket Team played a North California all-star team in the Australians' 56-game tour of the U.S. and Canada. The stadium was also home to several colleges (Santa Clara, USF, St. Mary's), Lowell High School, and the now-defunct San Francisco Polytechnic High School.
Comedian, briefly attended Lowell before transferring to Ruth Asawa San Francisco School of the Arts. [56] Lisa Bielawa: Composer and vocalist [43] Daniel Handler: 1988 Aka Lemony Snicket, bestselling author of a series of children's novels: A Series of Unfortunate Events, and a novel set in a fictional Lowell High School, The Basic Eight. [57 ...
The Kentucky High School Soccer Coaches Association has released its boys and girls All-State teams for the 2023 season. Teams are divided into All-State West (Regions 1-8) and All-State East ...
Perennial favorites in the Jackson boys and girls soccer teams and North Canton Hoover boys soccer team are joined by four others in OHSAA regionals.
Cawley Memorial Stadium is a 6,000-seat multipurpose stadium in Lowell, Massachusetts primarily used for football, soccer, field hockey, track and field and lacrosse.The stadium was named after Edward Cawley, a landowner who owned several plots of land near the stadium on which the complex sits. [1]