Jefferson–Scranton Community School District

Former school district in Iowa

Jefferson–Scranton Community School District or Jefferson–Scranton Community Schools (JSCS) was/is a school district headquartered in Jefferson, Greene County, Iowa, United States. It served the communities of Jefferson and Scranton, Paton-Churdan, Grand Junction and other surrounding towns.

History

The district was established on July 1, 1992, by the merger of the Jefferson and Scranton school districts.[1]

In 2001, the district had 1,422 students; this declined to 1,002 in 2013.[2]

In the 2012 school year, it entered a grade-sharing relationship (in which students from one district attended school in another district for certain grade levels) with the East Greene Community School District.[3] The two districts merged into the Greene County Community School District on July 1, 2014.[4]

Schools

At one time it had four schools: Jaques/South Elementary Schools (Jefferson), Scranton Elementary School, Jefferson–Scranton Middle School, and Jefferson–Scranton High School.[5]

The Scranton school building, a K-12 school until circa 1989,[6] had a three-story section built in 1915.[7]

Circa 1997 it had about 277 students.[6] The school closed in 2008; the school district had notified the city government in 2006 although gave the city two years' notice before closing the school so the city could plan for the future of the school. In 2010 the city government acquired the building, paying $1 for it, and converted it into a community center; the city government considered converting the school facility into an apartment block, but it determined it would have required too much money. The city government determined that it could not find a purpose for the 1913 section; therefore its razing occurred in 2012. The current Greene County district, as of 2014, rented the school gymnasium for athletic meetups.[7]

The 44,000-square-foot (4,100 m2) Jacques Elementary School was built in 1991–1992.[8]

Jefferson–Scranton High had about 425 students circa 1997.[9]

References

  1. ^ "REORGANIZATION & DISSOLUTION ACTIONS SINCE 1965-66" (PDF). Iowa Department of Education. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2019-02-09. Retrieved 2020-03-22.
  2. ^ "Vote to combine school districts is Tuesday". Daily Times Herald. 2013-02-04. Retrieved 2018-07-19. - Date from here
  3. ^ "Home." East Greene Community School District. July 23, 2012. Retrieved on June 25, 2018.
  4. ^ "East Greene and Jefferson-Scranton schools vote to consolidate". Daily Times-Herald. 2013-02-06. Archived from the original on 2018-06-24. Retrieved 2018-06-25.
  5. ^ Home. Jefferson-Scranton Community School District. May 19, 1998. Retrieved on July 19, 2018.
  6. ^ a b "Scranton Elementary School." Jefferson-Scranton Community School District. January 13, 1997. Retrieved on July 19, 2018.
  7. ^ a b "When schools close". Daily Times Herald. 2014-03-28. Archived from the original on 2018-07-17. Retrieved 2018-07-17.
  8. ^ "Jacques Elementary School." Jefferson-Scranton Community School District. January 13, 1997. Retrieved on July 19, 2018.
  9. ^ "Home." Jefferson-Scranton High School. January 13, 1997. Retrieved on July 19, 2018.

External links

  • Jefferson-Scranton Community School District at the Wayback Machine (archive index)
  • v
  • t
  • e
Defunct school districts in Iowa since 1965–1966
Most of the districts were merged after public votes. Dissolutions, most also the result of public votes, are in italics, and involuntary dissolutions done by the Iowa State Board of Education are marked with asterisks (*).
1960s
  • 1966: Correctionville/Cushing
  • Dysart/Geneseo
  • Lawton/Bronson
  • 1969: Garrison
  • Roland/Story City
1970s
  • 1971: Stuart/Menlo
  • 1973: Clarence/Lowden
  • 1974: Miles/Sabula
  • 1976: Laurens/Marathon
  • 1978: Buffalo Center/Rake
  • Swea City/Ledyard
  • 1979: Armstrong/Ringsted
  • Rembrandt/Sioux Rapids
1980s
  • 1980: Galva/Holstein
  • Eldora/New Providence
  • 1981: Hartley/Melvin
  • Akron/Westfield
  • 1983: Collins/Maxwell
  • Ruthven/Ayrshire
  • 1984: Fayette
  • 1985: Colfax/Mingo
  • Sibley/Ocheyedan
  • 1988: Boone Valley
  • Arnolds Park/Milford
  • Bayard/Coon Rapids
  • 1989: Havelock-Plover
  • Panora-Linden/Y-J-B
1990s
  • 1990: Calamus/Wheatland
  • 1991: Colo/NESCO
  • Hartley–Melvin/Sanborn
  • Prairie City/Monroe
  • Central Webster/Dayton
  • Hedrick (*)
  • 1992: Beaman-Conrad-Liscomb/Union-Whitten
  • Garwin/Green Mountain
  • Irwin/Manilla
  • Buffalo Center–Rake/Lakota
  • LDF/SEMCO
  • Jefferson/Scranton
  • Steamboat Rock/Wellsburg
  • 1993: Adel-DeSoto/Central Dallas
  • Center Point/Urbana
  • Clarion/Goldfield
  • Clay Central/Everly
  • Hubbard/Radcliffe
  • Manson/Northwest Webster
  • Marcus/Meriden-Cleghorn
  • Lost Nation
  • Fonda/Newell-Providence
  • Rolfe
  • Palmer/Pomeroy
  • Cedar Valley/Prairie
  • Carson-Macedonia/Oakland
  • Lytton/Rockwell City
  • Crestland/Schaller
  • Sioux Rapids-Rembrandt/Sioux Valley
  • Paullina/Primghar/Sutherland
  • Lake City/Lohrville
  • Dysart-Geneseo/La Porte City
  • Shellsburg/Vinton
  • 1994: Britt/Kanawha
  • Dow City-Arion/Dunlap
  • Mar-Mac/MFL
  • Maurice-Orange City/Floyd Valley
  • Battle Creek/Ida Grove
  • Belmond/Klemme
  • Eddyville/Blakesburg
  • 1995: Clarence-Lowden/Lincoln
  • Amana/Clear Creek
  • Oxford Junction
  • Mallard/West Bend
  • Dumont/Hampton
  • Norway
  • 1996: Hancock-Avoca/Shelby
  • Eastwood/Willow
  • Buffalo Center–Rake–Lakota/Thompson
  • Lake View-Auburn/Wall Lake
  • Dike/New Hartford
  • 1997: Estherville/Lincoln Central
  • Nashua/Plainfield
  • 1998: Gladbrook/Reinbeck
  • Grand Valley
2000s
2010s2020s
Consolidation/dissolution dates are July 1 of that year unless otherwise stated