Perkiomen Valley School District

Last updated

Perkiomen Valley School District
Address
3 Iron Bridge Drive
, Pennsylvania , 19426
United States
District information
MottoWhat will you learn today?
Grades K12
Established1969;54 years ago (1969)
SuperintendentDr. Barbara A. Russell
Budget$112.5 Million (2021-2022 school year)
Students and staff
Students4,993 (2021-2 school year)
Athletic conference Pioneer Athletic Conference
District mascotViking
ColorsOrange and brown
Other information
Website www.pvsd.org

The Perkiomen Valley School District (PVSD) is a school district based in central Montgomery County, Pennsylvania (US). It serves the boroughs of Collegeville, Trappe, and Schwenksville, and the townships of Lower Frederick, Perkiomen, and Skippack, in Pennsylvania. [1] The district headquarters are in Perkiomen Township. [2] [3]

Contents

The district's mascot is the Viking.

History

The Perkiomen Valley School District was formed in 1969 through the merger of the Perkiomen Joint School District and the Schwenksville Union School District. Perkiomen Joint School District was, itself, a consolidation of Collegeville, Trappe, and Skippack Township (served by the former Collegeville-Trappe High School), while Schwenksville Union School District had unified Schwenksville, Lower Frederick Township, and Perkiomen Township (served by the former Schwenksville High School).

Its mascot and distinctive colors of orange and brown were elected by the students in the spring of 1969, after the merger was announced. (Collegeville-Trappe had the Colonel and colors of red and gold, and Schwenksville, the Bluebird, with blue and white.) Some alumni believe that the new mascot and colors were chosen by the administration – for some unexplained reason – without regard to the election results.

Perkiomen Valley High School, then housed in what had been the Collegeville-Trappe High School building, and the former Perkiomen Valley Junior High School, housed at the old Schwenksville High School, opened that fall. The current high school building, at 509 Gravel Pike (Pennsylvania Route 29), Graterford, Perkiomen Township (Collegeville postal address), opened in the fall of 1976.

The original superintendent was the late Dr. U. Berkley Ellis, Jr.

U.S. News & World Report, in its 2018 list of best high schools in the United States, [4] ranked Perkiomen Valley High School the ninth best high school in Pennsylvania. [5]

Schools

Notable alumni

Related Research Articles

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Collegeville is a borough in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, a suburb outside of Philadelphia on Perkiomen Creek. Collegeville was incorporated in 1896. It is the location of Ursinus College, which opened in 1869. The population was 5,089 at the 2010 census.

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The Manor of Gilberts was one of the areas of land that William Penn set aside for himself as the Proprietor of the Province of Pennsylvania. The Manor was located on the along the left (northeastern) bank of the Schuylkill River, extending above and below the Perkiomen Creek. The Manor was created on 8 October 1683 when Penn wrote a warrant assigning the Manor to himself. The tract was named after his paternal grandmother Joanne (Gilbert) Penn's family.

Center Point is an unincorporated community in Worcester Township, Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, United States, at the junction of Routes 73 and 363. It is drained by the Zacharias Creek westward into the Skippack Creek, a tributary of the Perkiomen Creek. The community is served by the Methacton School District and by the Collegeville, Lansdale, and Norristown post offices, with the zip codes of 19426, 19446, and 19403, respectively.

Ridge Pike is a major historic road in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania that opened in 1706 that originally connected Wissahickon Creek to Perkiomen Creek. Inside Philadelphia, it is called Ridge Avenue. Going westward, it traverses many eastern Pennsylvania neighborhoods in Montgomery County including Conshohocken and beyond, connecting with Germantown Pike near Collegeville and continuing to Pottstown. In Montgomery County, Ridge Pike is called Main Street in the Norristown area and again in Collegeville and Trappe, and is called High Street in the Pottstown area.

References

  1. "About." Perkiomen Valley School District. Retrieved on October 9, 2018.
  2. "Directions to PVSD." Perkiomen Valley School District. Retrieved on October 9, 2018. "Perkiomen Valley School District 3 Iron Bridge Drive, Collegeville, PA 19426"
  3. "Maps." Perkiomen Township, Pennsylvania. Retrieved on October 9, 2018.
  4. "2022 Best High Schools in America". US News. February 20, 2023. Retrieved July 17, 2023.
  5. "Find Pennsylvania High Schools". US News. Retrieved July 17, 2023.