Mountain Ridge High School (Maryland)
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Mountain Ridge High School is a high school in Frostburg, Maryland, United States, that houses over 1000 students from the Georges Creek Valley, the Greater Frostburg vicinity, and the Westernport region. Mountain Ridge is part of Allegany County Public Schools. The school mascot is a miner and the school colors are red, black, white and gold.
Mountain Ridge High School | |
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Address | |
100 Dr. Nancy S. Grasmick Lane , 21532 United States | |
Coordinates | 39°38′57″N 78°54′50″W / 39.64917°N 78.91389°W |
Information | |
Type | Public Secondary school |
Established | 2007 |
School board | Allegany County Board of Education |
School district | Allegany County Public Schools |
Oversight | Maryland State Department of Education |
Superintendent | Jeffrey S. Blank |
Principal | Danny Carter[1] |
Grades | 9–12 |
Enrollment | 825[2] (2016) |
Color(s) | Red, Black, White, & Gold |
Mascot | Miner |
Nickname | Home of the Miners. |
Team name | Miners |
Feeder schools | Mt. Savage Middle Westmar Middle |
Website | Mountain Ridge High School website |
History
editMountain Ridge High School was established as a result of the consolidation of Westmar High School and Beall High School. It cost $40 million to build. The doors of Mountain Ridge opened in 2007.
Westmar High School
editWestmar High School was located in Lonaconing, Maryland, and enrolled more than 400 from the Georges Creek Valley, Westernport, and the region surrounding U.S. Route 220 between Danville and McCoole. The school mascot was the Wildcat and its colors were red and gray. Westmar came into being with the consolidation of Valley High School (of Lonaconing) and Bruce High School (of Westernport). Bruce closed in 1986, its students transferring to Valley High School. Bruce became a middle school. During the 1989-1990 school year, controversy erupted surrounding the school's name which remained the same following the consolidation, and a new name, Westmar High School, was chosen to better signify a unified Valley and Bruce in late 1989. Subsequently, Bruce Middle became Westmar Middle. In the fall of 2007, Westmar Middle relocated from its Westernport location to the Westmar High School building in Lonaconing following the closure of Westmar High earlier in 2007.
Valley High School
editValley High School was established in 1953 as a result of the consolidation of Central High School (of Lonaconing) and Barton High School. Central was located next to the Iron Furnace in Lonaconing. Its doors opened in the fall of 1896 and was the first official high school of the Lonaconing area. Barton High School was located on Latrobe St. The mascot was the Black Knight, and the school colors were black and silver.
Bruce High School
editBruce High School was the first official high school in Westernport. Bruce High opened in 1893 and closed 1986. It was first located on Hammond Street prior to 1900, then moved to Church Street where Westernport Elementary School is now. In 1957, Bruce moved to a new location on Philos Avenue. In 1986, Bruce High closed and the building became the new Bruce Middle School. In 1989, Bruce Middle became Westmar Middle. In 2007, Westmar Middle relocated to Lonaconing, vacating the former Bruce building. Bruce was named after Oliver Herman Bruce, principal of Westernport schools from 1875 until 1920. The school colors were Blue & White and the mascot was the Bulldog.
Beall High School
editBeall High School was established in the mid-1890s as the first high school of Frostburg. The first Beall High School was located at the corner of Loo Street (now College Avenue) and Broadway, where Beall Elementary School stands today. The first graduating class consisted of six female graduates in 1897. The original building was renovated in 1910, and expanded in 1930. By the late 1930s, the Frostburg community was in dire need of a much larger, newer facility. In 1939, ground was broken for a new Beall High School, located at 331 E. Main Street, in an area locally known as the "Eckhart Flat." The newer building is the one that most graduates and citizens of Frostburg are familiar with. It was considered an architectural wonder of its time with its Art Deco styling.[3]
In 2000, Beall consolidated with Mount Savage High School which is currently occupied by Mount Savage (K-8) School. The elementary school section of Mount Savage (K-5) houses students from the Mt. Savage region only. The middle school section (6-8) houses students from both Frostburg and Mt. Savage (all students living in the former Beall High school district). In 2007, Beall High School closed and the student body consolidated with that of Westmar High into the newly built Mountain Ridge High School, constructed at the site of the former Beall High School Stadium.[4] In the fall of 2007, Beall was demolished in order to make way for athletic fields for Mountain Ridge.
The school mascot was the Mountaineer and the school colors were blue and gold.
Athletics
editState championships
editGirls Soccer
- Steve Malone Sportsmanship Award 2010[5]
Boys Soccer:
Baseball
- Class 1A 2012[6]
Softball
- Class 1A 2012, 2013[6]
Tennis
- Class 1A Mixed Doubles 2019[6]
Girls Track & Field
- Class 1A 4x800 Meter Relay 2013[6]
Fall Sports
editFootball, Boys' Soccer, Girls' Soccer, Cross Country, Golf, Unified Tennis, Volleyball
Winter Sports
editBoys' Basketball, Girls' Basketball, Wrestling, Bowling, Unified Bocce Ball
Spring Sports
editBaseball, Softball, Track & Field, Tennis, Unified Track
References
edit- ^ "MR Administration". www.mountainridgehigh.com. Retrieved 18 September 2018.
- ^ "Mountain Ridge High School". NCES. Retrieved 10 December 2018.
- ^ John Myerly Company (1930). Written at Frostburg, Md.. Beall High School, Frostburg, Maryland. Hagerstown, Md. Retrieved January 13, 2019 – via DigitalCommonwealth.org.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Berry, Daleen (June 2, 2007). Written at Frostburg, Md.. "Emotions high at Beall : Frostburg school will be demolished to make way for Mountain Ridge stadium — Archive". Cumberland Times-News. Cumberland, Md. Archived from the original on February 4, 2013. Retrieved January 13, 2019.
- ^ a b c "2019 MPSSAA Fall Record Book" (PDF).
- ^ a b c d "2020 MPSSAA Spring Record Book" (PDF).