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It is the only high school in the Mount Gilead Exempted Village Schools district. Their nickname is the Indians. The school currently is under superintendent Dr. Zack Howard. The school uses three buildings for students: Park Avenue, a K-5 building; Cherry Street (admin. bldg.), a middle school containing 6–8; and the High School, also ...
The 10 stars represent the 10 associate schools of the district. The seven circles represent the major groups of people who work together to make Tri-Rivers function: students (adult and secondary), alumni, staff (including school board members), parents and families, advisory committee members, agencies and community organizations, and ...
The public school system provides five elementary schools (Star, Mt. Gilead, Candor, Page Street, and Green Ridge), two middle schools (West Montgomery and East Montgomery and one high school (Montgomery Central, formed in 2020 by the merger of East Montgomery High and West Montgomery High).
Here is a roundup of Saturday's action at the Division III district track and field championships held at Westerville North.
Cardington-Lincoln High School is a public high school in Cardington, Ohio. [5] It is the only high school in the Cardington-Lincoln Local Schools district. The high school has a long-standing and Fierce rivalry with Mount Gilead High School's Indians, five miles (8.0 km) northeast of Cardington.
Mount Gilead may refer to: The Mount of Gilead, in the Bible; Mount Gilead, a pioneer estate now located in Gilead, New South Wales; Mount Gilead, North Carolina. Mount Gilead Downtown Historic District; Mount Gilead, Ohio. Mount Gilead High School; Mount Gilead State Park; Mount Gilead-Mansfield Road; Mount Gilead-Mount Vernon Road; Mount ...
The Haywood plantation house where Oscar Haywood lived is in Mount Gilead. He is buried in Sharon Cemetery in the town. Mount Gilead is the birthplace of civil rights attorney Julius L. Chambers (b. 1936). [6] A graduate of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (J.D., 1962), Chambers served as editor-in-chief of the school's Law Review.
The Negro boarding school attracted students from all of the surrounding rural areas including towns now known as Biscoe, Mount Gilead, Candor, Pekin, Star, in addition to Troy, North Carolina. Peabody Academy was the only institution, at the time, that served the educational needs of African Americans.