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From the start, the ISL contained a mix of day and boarding schools, as well as religious and nonsectarian schools. The league changed its name to the Independent School League in 1974. [citation needed] In the 1960s and 1970s, Middlesex, Groton, St. Sebastian's, Roxbury Latin, St. Paul's, Lawrence, Rivers, and St. George's joined the league.
The MIAA was founded in 1978, and was preceded by both the Massachusetts Secondary School Principals Association (MSSPA) (1942–1978) and the Massachusetts Interscholastic Athletic Council (MIAC) (1950–1978).
Hockey's deep roots in Massachusetts were stablished not only by the numerous teams and players but also by the significance of the games. The Beanpot , held each year since 1952, is the premier in-season tournament for college hockey and routinely provides a spectacle for Boston in early February. [ 20 ]
] In most sports members are in MIAA division 1 and/or division 2 for MIAA tournaments depending on the sport. The smallest member in the Bay State Conference is Milton High School at 1,070 students while the largest member is Framingham High School at 2,177 students.
Full NCAA Division I member colleges in Massachusetts. – FBS Football, – FCS Football, – Non-football. Team School City Conference ... Ice hockey Soccer M W M W M W
The Hockomock League is an interscholastic high school athletic league located in Southeastern Massachusetts, founded in 1932. [1] The league took its name from a historic, freshwater swamp which served as a fortress for the Wampanoag native tribe during the King Philip’s War.
^A The NCAA began sponsoring Division III hockey as a championship sport in the 1983–84 season. ^B SUNY Plattsburgh's 1987 national championship was vacated by the NCAA Committee on Infractions. (No championship was awarded that year.) ^C Lebanon Valley previously competed in Division III from 1998–2010. The school dropped varsity hockey in ...
The New England Huskies Junior Hockey Club is a non-profit 501-3 organization which chartered in 1993 as the Tyngsboro Huskies as a charter member of the Eastern Junior Hockey League (EJHL). The New England Junior Huskies trace their roots to 1981 and Fitchburg's "Wallace Wallopers" of the now-defunct New England Junior Hockey League (NEJHL).