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Miami Trace High School

Coordinates: 39°34′36″N 83°28′19″W / 39.57667°N 83.47194°W / 39.57667; -83.47194
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Miami Trace High School
Address
Map
300 Bloomingburg New Holland Rd NE

43160

Coordinates39°34′36″N 83°28′19″W / 39.57667°N 83.47194°W / 39.57667; -83.47194
Information
TypePublic, Coeducational high school
Established1955 [5]
School districtMiami Trace Local School District
SuperintendentKim Pittser
PrincipalBryan Sheets
Faculty48 [1]
Teaching staff35
Grades9-12
Enrollment782 (2023-24)[6]
Student to teacher ratio22:1
Color(s)    [2] Black, white, gold
SongMiami Trace Alma Mater
Fight songGo, you Panthers, Go Go Go! Fight on through that line! Go, you Panthers, Go Go Go! Scoring every time! Go, you Panthers, Go Go Go! Victory Black and White! We will fight team fight, we will win tonight so go Trace go!
Athletics conferenceFrontier Athletic Conference[2]
SportsFootball, Cheerleading, Marching Band, Girls’ Tennis, Girls’ Volleyball, Cross Country, Basketball, Wrestling, Bowling, Swim, Boys’ Tennis, Baseball, Softball, and Track & Field. [4]
MascotPanther
Team namePanthers[2]
RivalWashington City Schools
AccreditationNorth Central Association of Colleges and Schools[3]
NewspaperPanther tales
YearbookMiTra
Alumni11,580
WebsiteDistrict Website

Miami Trace High School is a public high school near Washington Court House, Ohio. It is the only high school in the Miami Trace Local School District. Their mascot is the Panthers.

The Miami Trace Local School District serves parts of Washington Court House while also serving the residents in almost every other area in Fayette County as well as small areas in Clinton County near Sabina and Madison County. Miami Trace is a member of the Frontier Athletic Conference (FAC) composed of Chillicothe, Jackson, Hillsboro, Washington City Schools, and McClain.[7]

History

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Miami Trace Local Schools was established on July 1, 1955 following the consolidation of eight local school districts in Fayette County. These local schools were formerly Jasper, Concord, Green, Perry, Wayne, Madison, Marion, and Union. On November 25, 1955, Bloomingburg, Paint, and Jefferson local schools were consolidated into the Miami Trace Local School District. On February 10, 1958, New Holland became part of Miami Trace. Since then, Miami Trace’s boundaries have been cemented as the entirety of Fayette County, exclusive of Washington City Schools, and a considerable amount of area from surrounding counties.

Legacy

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alt text
Class of 2023 graduation ceremony.

These formerly independent school districts were consolidated in order to ensure the best education for the rural citizens of Fayette and surrounding counties. Since then, it has become the mission statement of Miami Trace to provide a quality education with opportunities and relationships that cultivate success. According to the records held at the Miami Trace central office, 11,580 students have graduated from Miami Trace, a proven rate of success for its students. Within the 61st graduating class at Miami Trace, the class of 2023, a wide variety of students are attending post-secondary options. Including colleges such as Ohio State University, Ohio University, Miami University, University of Cincinnati, and Southern State Community College. While a number of other students are entering the workforce to immediately begin their careers. Miami Trace has established a vision statement targeted to provide all students with the ability to become successful within society. This vision has been successfully proven and accomplished throughout Miami Trace’s 61 years of operation and instruction.

Extracurriculars

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Miami Trace holds strong backgrounds in its sports. Including football, and has built a strong reputation in Girls' Basketball and Wrestling in recent past. Miami Trace has one of the top FFA chapters in Ohio.

Miami Trace additionally provides many clubs and other activities. Including a Key Club, Spanish Club, Drama Club, Art Club, Book Club, Science Club, Robotics Club, Academic Quiz Bowl, National Honor Society, and Student Government.

Additionally, Miami Trace has a growing performing arts program. Miami Trace offers five choirs, including Women’s, Men’s, Advanced Women’s, Symphonic, and Soundsations A Cappella Choirs respectively, 4 bands, including Jazz, Pep, Marching, Concert, and Symphonic Bands respectively. Symphonic Band and Symphonic Choir boast the achievement of receiving superior ratings at the Ohio Music Education Association Large Group Contest. Miami Trace also performs annual musicals and plays.

alt text
Combined choirs performing Battle Hymn of the Republic at annual Senior Farewell Concert

New Buildings

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alt text
Miami Trace High School, built in 1962 and demolished in 2019.

A new elementary school for Miami Trace opened in 2008 adjacent to the high school along Ohio 41 NW. This building replaced the small, reportedly 100-year-old elementary buildings dotted across the county. Additionally, a new middle school was built in 2011.[8]

Due to growing class sizes and age of the 1960’s high school, a new high school was constructed in 2019.

See also Ohio High School Athletic Association and Ohio High School Athletic Conferences

Notable alumni

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Alma Mater

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"Miami Trace Alma Mater" is the school song for Miami Trace High School. It was written in 1962 for the Miami Trace High School Band by Rosemary Williams.

Lyrics

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Written by Rosemary Williams, 1962

Miami Trace, Miami Trace, we'll honor thee for aye

Our loyalty to thy dear halls will never waive

As years roll on, we'll think upon the joys we can't replace

Thy truth will guide us onward with pride, for Miami Trace, for Miami Trace

Performances

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The Alma Mater is traditionally performed during pre-game festivities at Friday night football games and other school festivities by the Miami Trace Marching Panther Pride.

Miami Trace's A Capella choir: Soundsations, also performed the song, with their rendition being posted on the school's YouTube page.

Music

\header {
  title = "Miami Trace Alma Mater"
  composer = "Rosemary Williams"
}
\language "english" \relative c'{
   \key ef \major
   \time 3/4 \tempo "Lyrical Waltz" 4 = 120
    \partial 8*2 bf4 
    g'2 ef4 d2 c4 af'2 f4 ef2 d4 bf'2 g4 f2 ef4 c'2.~c2 \breathe \break 
    c4 c2 af4 g2 f4 bf4 g4 f4 ef2 ef4 g2. c,2. f2.~f2 \breathe \break
    bf,4 g'2 ef4 d2 c4 af'2 f4 ef2 d4 bf'2 \break
    g4 f2 ef4 c'2.~c2 \break
    c4 c2 c4 d2 c4 bf4 a4 ^"*" bf4 af2 g8 a8 c2. d,2. bf'2.~bf4 \break
    af4 g4 c2. d,2. ef2. \bar "|."
  }
  \addlyrics {
  Mi -- a -- mi Trace, Mi -- a -- mi Trace, we'll ho -- nor thee for aye._ Thy lo -- yal -- ty to thy _ dear halls will ne -- ver waive._ As years roll on we'll think u -- pon the joys we can't re -- place.__ Thy truths will guide us on -- ward with pride, for Mi -- a -- mi Trace,_ for Mi -- a -- mi Trace.
  }

*Misconceptions have occurred over the note for "ward" in the last line. The band arrangement has the note marked as an A natural, while the choral version has a C.

The A natural notation has been marked, as it is most commonly heard this way.

References

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  1. ^ Public School Review LLC. "Miami Trace High School Review". Retrieved 2009-07-29.
  2. ^ a b c OHSAA. "Ohio High School Athletic Association member directory". Archived from the original on 2010-11-03. Retrieved 2010-02-17.
  3. ^ NCA-CASI. "NCA-Council on Accreditation and School Improvement". Archived from the original on March 15, 2010. Retrieved 2010-02-17.
  4. ^ OHSAA. "OHSAA Member School Info". Archived from the original on 2010-06-13. Retrieved 2009-07-29.
  5. ^ Miami Trace High School Official Site. "Miami Trace High School History". Retrieved 2009-07-29.
  6. ^ "Miami Trace High School". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved March 18, 2019.
  7. ^ "Athletics". Archived from the original on 2017-02-08. Retrieved 2017-02-07.
  8. ^ "'Final piece of the puzzle'". Record Herald. 2019-01-28. Retrieved 2024-02-26.
  9. ^ Google News. "The Bryan Times - Aug 4, 1979 - 'North Wins, 15-5'". Retrieved 2009-07-29. {{cite web}}: |author= has generic name (help) [dead link]
  10. ^ Google Books (April 2003). The Official Ohio State Football Encyclopedia By Jack Park p.13. Sports Publishing LLC. ISBN 9781582616957. Retrieved 2009-07-29. {{cite book}}: |author= has generic name (help)
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