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Locust Fork is located southwest of the center of Blount County, at 33°53'47.494" North, 86°37'50.048" West (33.896526, -86.630569). [3] It is situated on a bluff overlooking the Blackburn Fork of the Little Warrior River.
Bullock County High School, originally named Union Springs High School and then Carver High School, is a public school serving about 370 student in grades 7 to 12 in Union Springs, Alabama. [1] [2] Hornets are the school mascot and black and old gold the school colors. [3] It is in the Bullock County School District and serves grades 9 to 12. [4]
Locust Fork High School, Locust Fork; Blountsville. J.B. Pennington High School; Susan Moore High School; Cleveland. Blount County Career Technical Center;
The Swann Covered Bridge, also called the Joy Covered Bridge [1] or Swann-Joy Covered Bridge, is a county-owned, wood-and-metal combination style covered bridge that spans the Locust Fork of the Black Warrior River in Blount County, Alabama, United States.
Elmore County High School is a public high school in Eclectic, Alabama. It is a part of the Elmore County Public School System. In 2006, as part of renovations, the school was to receive a new band room. In 2007 the Burt-Haynie Stadium at the school was to be renovated. Their football team was known for their 14 game losing streak from November 16, 1961 to September 20, 1963. In 1924 their ...
Clarke County High School. Clarke County High School is a public high school in Grove Hill, Alabama. Its mascot is the Bulldogs and the school colors are royal blue and white. The school runs on a four-block schedule. Christopher Young became the school's principal in 2020.
Wilson High School is a public K-12 school in Lauderdale County, Alabama, near Florence. [1] It is a part of Lauderdale County School District . As of 2019 [update] it had 130 employees, with 80 of them in the faculty, and 1,300 students.
The Locust Fork is home to the nationally sanctioned annual Locust Fork Canoe and Kayak Races. [2] In the late 1980s, the Birmingham Water Works proposed damming the river as a source of drinking water. When those plans became public, the grass-roots Friends of the Locust Fork River formed to investigate.