The Olympic Conference was a high school conference in northwest Illinois in existence from 1976 to 2010. The conference participated in athletics and activities in the Illinois High School Association. The conference comprised high schools with enrollments between 300-600 students on the fringe of the Illinois Quad Cities, Peoria, Galesburg, and in and around the cities of Macomb and Monmouth.
School | Location | Mascot | Colors | Enrollment | IHSA Classes 2/3/4 [1] | IHSA Music Class | IHSA Football Class [2] | IHSA Cheerleading Class |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Farmington Central High School | Farmington, IL | Farmers | 438 | A/1A/2A | B | 2A | Small squad | |
Macomb High School | Macomb, IL | Bombers | 587 | A/1A/2A | B | 3A | Small squad | |
Monmouth-Roseville High School | Monmouth, IL | Titans | 531 | A/1A/2A | B | 3A | Small squad | |
Orion High School | Orion, IL | Chargers | 346 | A/1A/1A | C | 2A | Small Squad | |
Rockridge High School | Taylor Ridge, IL | Rockets | 444 | A/1A/2A | B | 2A | Small squad | |
Sherrard High School | Sherrard, IL | Tigers | 534 | A/1A/2A | B | 3A | Small squad |
Sources:IHSA Conferences [3] and IHSA Member Schools Directory [4]
The original Olympic Conference formed in the fall of 1948. The six charter members were Astoria, Bushnell, Cuba, Lewistown, Spoon River Valley, and Table Grove VIT. The conference got its name because, like the Olympics held that year, the member schools would be competing in many different events. The first football competition was held in 1948, but to be eligible for the championship schools had to play at least 3 other member schools. In 1953 Industry was added, bringing the total to seven member schools. The 1958-1959 academic year was the league's final season. The Olympic conference name was resurrected in 1976 with completely different schools. [5]
The present day Olympic Conference formed in the fall of 1976. The eight charter members included Abingdon, Aledo, and Knoxville from the Little 6 Conference; Joy-Westmer, Orion, Sherrard, and Taylor Ridge-Rockridge from the Corn Belt Conference; and Monmouth from the Illio Conference. After the 1981-1982 season Abingdon and Knoxville left to help form the Prairieland Conference, bringing the total to 6 schools. After the 1986-1987 season Joy-Westmer dropped out and Macomb took their place in the fall of 1987. In the fall of 1988 Sherrard consolidated with Winola (New Windsor-Viola), but retained the name Sherrard. [6] In the fall of 1992 Farmington joined and Knoxville rejoined the Olympic, again giving the league an 8 team alignment. [5]
The 2000-2010 decade brought several changes to the Olympic Conference. Monmouth consolidated with Roseville in the fall of 2005 to become Monmouth-Roseville. [7] Aledo left the Conference after the 2005-2006 academic year to join the Lincoln Trail conference and West Prairie Trail mega conference for football. [5] Knoxville left after the 2008-2009 academic year, [8] and Farmington departed after the 2009-2010 season, [9] both to rejoin the Prairieland conference. The loss of three conference schools in a short period of time put the remaining schools in the awkward position of facing a 5 school conference in 2010. The Conference had experienced a similar dilemma in 1987 with the loss of Westmer. However, at that time, Macomb High School filled the void.
In 2009, the Olympic Conference explored options of Kewanee High School joining the Olympic, Mercer County High School (formerly Aledo and Westmer High Schools) rejoining the Olympic, joining or merging with the Three Rivers Conference (north of the Olympic), and joining or merging with the Lincoln Trail Conference (east and south of the Olympic). A solution was reached when as offer was extended from the West Central Conference (distant south of the Olympic) to the five Olympic Conference schools that remained in 2010.
Due to the geographic range of the newly aligned West Central Conference, it was split into north and south divisions for most activities, with the five remaining Olympic Conference schools and Illini West High School (Carthage) comprising the north division. [10] Mercer County High School considered joining the West Central Conference beginning in 2011. This would have put many of the original Olympic Conference members back together, albeit under a new name, [11] but it has not occurred to date.
School | Years | Consolidations | Conference Came From | Conference Went To |
---|---|---|---|---|
Abingdon High School | 1976–1982 | n/a | Little 6 | Prairieland |
Aledo High School | 1976–2006 | 2009 with Westmer | Little 6 | Lincoln Trail |
Farmington Central High School | 1992–2010 | n/a | Prairieland | Prairieland |
Knoxville High School | 1976–1982; 1992–2009 | n/a | Little 6; Prairieland | Prairieland; Prairieland |
Macomb High School | 1987–2010 | n/a | Great Midwestern | West Central |
Monmouth-Roseville High School | 1976–2010 | 2005 with Roseville | Illio | West Central |
Orion High School | 1976–2010 | n/a | Corn Belt | West Central |
Rockridge High School | 1976–2010 | n/a | Corn Belt | West Central |
Sherrard High School | 1976–2010 | 1988 with Winola | Corn Belt | West Central |
Westmer High School | 1976–1987 | 2009 with Aledo | Corn Belt | Lincoln Trail |
The present day Olympic Conference won 23 state championships in IHSA sponsored athletics and activities. At the conclusion of the 2009-2010 season the conference won Illinois state titles in Boys Golf (9), Boys Football (5), Chess (3), Boys Wrestling (2), Girls Bowling (1), Girls Softball (1), Girls Track (1), and Scholastic Bowl (1).
Success may also be measured by the number of regional titles won by conference schools. For athletics and activities and activities without regionals, or where a team may still advance to state without winning the regional (or sectional), state qualifications or placing in the top 10 are roughly equivalent, as all mean the school is among the top schools (10-64) in the state within that division. In events where district titles were replaced by regionals, the data is summed. Only sectional titles are available for track. Only top 10 finishers are available for music. Based on these criteria, the most successful athletics and activities in the present day Olympic Conference through the 2008-2009 winter season are:
The most successful schools in the present day Olympic Conference, based on total regional championships or state qualifications through the 2008-2009 winter season, are:
The most successful individual programs in the present day Olympic Conference, based on rate of regional championship or state qualification production per year in the conference, are:
Aledo is a city in Mercer County, Illinois, United States. The population was 3,640 at the 2010 census, up from 3,613 in 2000. It is the county seat of Mercer County.
The Illinois High School Association (IHSA) is a state high school association in the United States that regulates competition in most interscholastic sports and some interscholastic activities at the high school level for the state of Illinois. It is a charter member of the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS). The IHSA regulates 14 sports for boys, 15 sports for girls, and eight co-educational non-athletic activities. More than 760 public and private high schools in the state of Illinois are members of the IHSA. The Association's offices are in Bloomington, Illinois.
St. Francis High School, also known as St. Francis or SFHS among its students and faculty, is a co-educational, Catholic college-preparatory school, located in Wheaton, Illinois and was founded in 1957, by the Christian Brothers, Franciscan Sisters, and Ladies of Loretto. It is currently operated by an independent Board of Directors. St. Francis strives to prepare its students for college, and thus sets high academic standards. The school has an enrollment of 731 students, as of 2018.
United High School or UHS, is a public four-year high schoollocated at 1905 100th Street near Monmouth, Illinois, a city of Warren County, Illinois, in the Midwestern United States. UHS is part of United Community Unit School District 304, which also includes United Junior High School, United North Elementary School, and United West Elementary School. Despite the Alexis United misnomer sometimes used to describe the high school, the campus is actually located 2 miles east of Monmouth, IL, though the district's north campus and one of the elementary schools is located in Alexis, Illinois. The misnomer is due to the district office previously being located in Alexis, Illinois. It has since been moved to the high school campus. The school serves a mixed city fringe, village, and rural residential community on the outskirts of the city of Monmouth, in the villages of Alexis, Kirkwood, Little York, North Henderson, and the unincorporated communities of Cameron and Gerlaw. Much of the school district is within the Galesburg micropolitan statistical area. United High School was formed by the consolidation of Alexis High School and Monmouth Warren High School in 2004. In 2007 Monmouth Yorkwood High School deactivated and was annexed into United High School.
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Monmouth-Roseville High School, or MRHS, is a public four-year high school located at 325 West 1st Avenue in Monmouth, Illinois, a city of Warren County, Illinois, in the Midwestern United States. MRHS is part of Monmouth-Roseville Community Unit School District 238, which also includes Monmouth-Roseville Junior High School, Central Intermediate School, Harding Primary School, and Lincoln Early Childhood School. The campus is located in Monmouth, IL, 17 miles west of Galesburg, Illinois, and serves a mixed city, village, and rural residential community. The school is in the Galesburg micropolitan statistical area which includes all of Knox and Warren counties. The school is located less than 1 mile from Monmouth College.
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