| Lakeview High School | |
|---|---|
| Wamogo Regional High School | |
| Location | |
| |
98 Wamogo Road , Connecticut 06759 United States | |
| Coordinates | 41°43′40″N73°13′32″W / 41.7278°N 73.2255°W |
| Information | |
| School type | Public, secondary school |
| Founded | 1955 |
| Status | Open |
| CEEB code | 070360 |
| Principal | Michael Valerio [1] |
| Grades | 7-12 |
| Number of students | 379 (2021-22) [2] |
| Language | English |
| Colors | Teal and White |
| Athletics conference | Berkshire League |
| Nickname | Bobcats |
| Rival | Litchfield |
| Website | www |
Lakeview High School, formerly Wamogo Regional High School is a public school in Litchfield, Connecticut. [3] It serves grades 9 through 12. It is the public high school for the surrounding towns of Litchfield, Morris, Warren, and Goshen. Additionally, students from the towns of Torrington, Terryville, Plymouth, Harwinton, Burlington, and Thomaston can attend if they applied to the Agriculture Education Program for high school students only. Wamogo Regional Middle School was located in the same facility and served grades 7 through 12. [4]
Wamogo was founded in 1955. Its name was a portmanteau stemming from the towns Warren, Morris, and Goshen, where the 'Wa' is for Warren, the 'mo' is for Morris, and the 'go' is for Goshen.
For many years the people of Warren, Morris and Goshen had felt keenly the need for a new high school. The school in Morris had become overcrowded. Warren and Goshen had no high schools of their own; their students attended various high schools in neighboring communities. Faced with an increasing student population, the citizens of these three communities were determined to provide more adequate educational facilities for their children.
On April 2, 1952, the temporary Regional Planning Committee had its first meeting. After ten months of intensive investigation and study, they made their recommendations. Those who served on this committee were Herbert Gubleman, Harry Moore, Roger Lyman and Arthur Wistrom from Goshen; George Angevine, William Hopkins, Harriet Tanner and Willis Tanner from Warren; David Benjamin, Brainerd Peck, Robert Skilton and Sherman Ives from Morris. Ernest O. Nybakken, Chief of the Bureau of Rural Services, State Department of Education, gave them valuable assistance.
One year later, on February 15, 1953, Goshen, Morris, and Warren voted to set up a regional high school district near the geographical center of the three towns. In June, the three towns elected their board members. Those elected were: Ruth W. Birmingham, George B. Angevine, Sherman K. Ives, Guido LaGrotta, David F. Benjamin, Frank J. Conlon, Roger T. Lyman, Carol Schilo, Robert H. Towne.
The members of the Board of Education, assisted by Dr. Charles Hapgood, supervisor of the district, gave unstintingly of their time and experience in facing the multitudinous problems that faced them. By December of that year, the site had been purchased, Nichols and Butterfield had been selected as architects, and the grading of the land begun. Shortly before Christmas, Goshen, Morris and Warren overwhelmingly approved a bond issue in the principal sum of $710,000.00. The building contract was given to the New England General Contracting Company. Mr. Russell Fitz was elected as principal of the school in February, 1954. On September 9, 1954, the cornerstone of the new Regional High School No. 6 was laid. The names of the three communities were combined to form the name of the new school–WAMOGO (Warren, Morris, Goshen).
On August 28, 1955, ten days before the school term was due to open, the building was completed and open to public inspection. Approximately 800 persons came to view, and to admire. On September 7, 1955, Wamogo Regional High School had it's opening day.
The school was officially dedicated on December 18, 1955, at an impressive ceremony with Governor Abraham Ribicoff serving as the main speaker.
The school had its first senior graduating class in 1956. There were 20 students, consisting of both girls and boys. [5]
On June 29, 2022, Warren, Morris, Goshen and Litchfield High School voted to merge their school systems, creating a new Region 20. The Wamogo building now serves as the high school for the new region, following the merge in 2024. [6] The sports programs were also merged, with Wamogo losing the "Warriors" branding. The new school mascot became a bobcat. [7]
Although 'Wamogo' remains the name of the school's agricultural program, the high school now goes under the name of Lakeview High School. [8]
| Sport | Class | Year(s) |
|---|---|---|
| Basketball (girls) | S | 1995 |
| Cross country (girls) | S | 1978 |
Notable people who have attended Wamogo include former NBA star Chuck Aleksinas and flat track motorcycle racer Kenny Coolbeth.[ citation needed ]