Marion Local High School (Maria Stein, Ohio)

Marion Local High School
Address
Map
1901 State Route 716

Marion Township,

Maria Stein
, ,
Ohio
45860

United States
Coordinates40°24′16″N 84°29′37″W / 40.40442°N 84.49355°W / 40.40442; -84.49355
Information
TypePublic (U.S.)
MottoEvery student. Every day. Whatever it takes.
Established1922
School boardRandall Bruns
School districtMarion Local School District
SuperintendentMike Pohlman
School codeHNBFTS
PrincipalTim Goodwin
Teaching staff15.00 (FTE)[1]
Grades9-12
Enrollment275 (2022-23)[1]
Student to teacher ratio18.33[1]
Color(s)   
Fight songGo, Go, You Marion Flyers
AthleticsDivision IV (VI football)
Athletics conferenceMidwest Athletic Conference
SportsFootball, Basketball, Baseball, Volleyball, Softball, Cross Country, Track, Swimming, Golf, Bowling
MascotFreddie Flyer
NicknameFlyers
RivalVersailles, Coldwater, St. Henry
NewspaperThe Gold Standard
YearbookThe Flyer
AlumniCory Luebke
Websitemarionlocal.org

Marion Local High School is a public high school located in Maria Stein, in Mercer County, Ohio's Marion Township. It currently has approximately 286 students enrolled. The students are from Maria Stein and several surrounding communities, including Cassella, Chickasaw, St. Rose and St. Sebastian in Mercer County, Osgood in Darke County, as well as a small portion of Auglaize County. These communities were served by a series of local one-room school houses that still stand in Chickasaw, Minster, St. Rose and St. Sebastian. In 1922 a 2-year high school was established in Maria Stein and in 1930 a 3-story brick school (named St. John's School) was completed directly across from St. John's Church. In 1955 the Marion Local Consolidated School District was established and charged with strengthening the educational opportunities for students in the 6 member communities. The Marion Local School District built a new high school, the Marion Local High School, in Maria Stein in 1957.

Notability

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Marion Local High School is notable statewide for its athletic prowess. Since 2000, the school has won 14 state football championships, setting a state record previously held by St Ignatius High School of Cleveland, Ohio.[2] In addition, the school has won 9 additional state championships in various sports since 1975, placing it in the upper echelon of state athletic programs. What is equally remarkable is that this success has fostered a "can do" attitude among students leading to academic and musical success described below. Despite its small size the school is ranked academically in the upper 20% of high schools in the state.[3]

Athletics

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Marion Local is a member of the Midwest Athletic Conference. They have captured more than 50 league championships in various MAC-sanctioned sports since 1973. Marion Local has the most playoff-era football state championships in the state of Ohio at 14.

Ohio High School Athletic Association State Championships

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OHSAA State Runner-Up

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OHSAA State Final Four

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Ohio Music Education Association

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  • OMEA State Marching Band Finals participant for 34 straight years (1984 to 2017)
  • 28 Superior Ratings at OMEA State Marching Band Finals.
    • 1984-2008, 2011-2012, 2015–2017
      • Class C in 1984, 1985, 2011, 2012, 2015-2017
      • Class B in 1986, 2006-2010
      • Class A in 1987-1989, 2003-2005
      • Class AA from 1990 through 2002

The Marion Local High School Band is the largest student organization in the high school. In addition to their band activities, more than three-quarters of the members participate in a sport.

Brad Spettel is the current band director.

Notable alumni

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References

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  1. ^ a b c "Marion Local High School". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved August 25, 2024.
  2. ^ Drape, Joe (December 5, 2019). "Football is Dying in Ohio. A Coach in This County Made It Thrive". The New York Times.
  3. ^ "Wayback Machine has not archived that URL" (PDF). marionlocal.k12.oh.us. Retrieved September 30, 2023.[dead link]
  4. ^ Yappi. "Yappi Sports Basketball D3". Archived from the original on January 13, 2007. Retrieved February 12, 2007.
  5. ^ OHSAA. "Ohio High School Athletic Association Web site". Retrieved December 31, 2006.
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