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Boyden–Hull Junior/High School

Coordinates: 43°11′22″N 96°8′9″W / 43.18944°N 96.13583°W / 43.18944; -96.13583
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Boyden–Hull Junior/High School
Their fight song is Minniesota Rouser
Address
Map
801 First Street[1]

, ,
51239

United States
Coordinates43°11′22″N 96°8′9″W / 43.18944°N 96.13583°W / 43.18944; -96.13583
Information
School typePublic
MottoBeing the Best It Can Be
Community, Empowerment, High Standards, and Innovation[2]
OpenedAugust 31, 1959 (1959-08-31)
School districtBoyden–Hull Community School District
NCES District ID1905190[3]
SuperintendentSteve Grond[4]
CEEB code162090[5]
NCES School ID190519000167[3]
PrincipalDan Pottebaum[4]
Grades7–12
Enrollment298 (2015–16)[6]
Student to teacher ratio13.63:1[3]
Color(s)Black and gold   (Comets)
Black, silver and blue    (Nighthawks)
Fight songOn, Wisconsin! (Comets)
Minnesota Rouser (Nighthawks)
Athletics conferenceSiouxland Conference
MascotComets/Nighthawks
Websitebhcomets.com/junior-high-school/

Boyden–Hull Junior/High School is the only public middle and high school located in Hull, Iowa, United States. It is a part of the Boyden–Hull Community School District. Their mascot is the Comet. The school's athletic teams compete in the Siouxland Conference. A few sports are shared with Rock Valley High School, a fellow Siouxland Conference member. The combined teams are known as the Nighthawks.

History

The merged Boyden–Hull School District was approved in a December 1958 vote of the Sioux County board of education.[7] Boyden and Hull were separate school districts until July 1, 1959.[8] The first school board election as a consolidated school district had taken place in March 1959,[9] followed by the first classes on August 31, 1959.[10][11] Hull High School's student newspaper was called Hull High Lights.[12] Its athletic teams were known as the Wild Cats.[13] Before the merger, Hull's basketball team had been to the state playoffs five times.[14][15] Boyden Public School's mascot was the Bombers.[13] Boyden's student newspaper was the Buzz Bomb.[16][17]

Technology and services

Smart Boards were first installed in 2007.[18] A one to one computing initiative was started in the 2011–12 school year,[19][20] as was the school's use of Moodle.[21] The district shares some classes with the nearby Rock Valley High School and George–Little Rock Senior High School through polycom videoconferencing technology.[22][23] Online classes are available for dual high school and college credit though Northwest Iowa Community College (NWICC). A school resource officer was assigned to the district beginning with the 2010 school year.[24] Boyden–Hull and Rock Valley hired a joint transportation director in July 2018.[25] In 2018, Boyden–Hull began a joint vocational education program with Sioux Center Community Schools and NWICC.[26]

Facilities

A new school building was completed by the 1964–65 school year.[27] Most of the school building was remodeled in the 1980s.[28] The auditorium was renovated in July 2013 and reopened in time for the 2013–14 school year.[29] The gymnasium was refurbished in 2015.[30] A remodeling project worth $11.2 million was approved in February 2018.[31][32] Additions to the school took place throughout 2018 and 2019.[33][34]

A vote to acquire land from the city of Hull and Herman Oldenkamp for Boyden–Hull's team sports took place in August 1964.[35][36] Boyden–Hull's athletic field was named for the consolidated district's first superintendent, A. R. Hesla, in 1974.[37] The football and track facilities there are shared with Western Christian.[38] The concession stand at Hesla Field was rebuilt in summer 2016.[39][40]

Extracurricular activities

The STORM (Students Teaching Others Role Modeling) Team was organized in the late 1990s.[41] The student organization is mainly active around Red Ribbon Week and also volunteers at the local chapter of the Ronald McDonald House.[42] Boyden–Hull Summer Theatre began in 2009.[43]

Athletics

Comets

A men's basketball team by the Boyden–Hull Comets moniker had begun play by the 1960–61 school year.[44] Men's track began by 1961,[45] and baseball by 1963.[46] Boyden–Hull began fielding a football team in 1964.[47] By 1965, the school had joined the Siouxland Conference.[48][49] The Comet wrestling program started in the 1976–1977 school year.[50]

Boyden–Hull tied West Harrison for a men's state track title in 1970.[51][52] The women's track team's highest finish was in 1984. They tied Le Mars Gehlen for second place.[53]

The men's basketball team has appeared in the Iowa High School Athletic Association tournament eighteen times since 1971,[54][55] with titles in 2003,[56][57] 2012,[58][59] and 2013.[60][61] Former coach Paul Walton compiled a 350–130 record over 26 years[62] and was inducted into the Iowa High School Basketball Hall of Fame in 2001.[63] The Comet basketball team made its first appearance in the 2A state tournament in 2019, losing the championship game to North Linn High School.[64][65] Boyden–Hull faced North Linn for a second time in 2020, defeating the Lynx to win their first 2A championship, and fourth overall.[66][67]

The Comet volleyball team has been to state twice, in 1991 and 2011.[68][69]

Shared sports

Boyden–Hull continued fielding athletics teams solely under the Comet moniker until the 1980s. Starting that decade, football and baseball were shared with George. Little Rock joined the partnership in 1987, and Boyden–Hull left, electing to combine their football and baseball teams with Rock Valley.[70] In 1990, the official sport-sharing agreement was struck.[53][71] The combined Boyden–Hull/Rock Valley teams split home games at each school, and the team name was adjusted depending on where the teams played. While in Rock Valley, teams were known as the Rockets, and in Hull, they went by the name Comets.[70] The BHRV collective began by sharing baseball and football, and expanded to softball in 1993, followed by the subsequent merger of the track and field and cross country teams in 1997.[70] In 1999, the BHRV alliance decided on a separate mascot, and have since been known as the Nighthawks.[70][71] The Boyden–Hull/Rock Valley football team made it to the championship game for the first time in 2009, falling to Solon High School.[72] In their second title game appearance, BHRV defeated Union High School for the 2016 2A championship.[73] Nighthawk football won another district final in 2017,[74] losing to Waukon High School in the semi-finals.[75] In 2018, the Nighthawks returned to the 2A football championship game, losing to Prairie City-Monroe High School.[76]

Notable alumni

See also

Area private schools:

References

  1. ^ "Boyden Hull High School Maxpreps Homepage". MaxPreps.com. Retrieved January 15, 2014.
  2. ^ Visser, Jeanne (September 17, 2014). "BH School Board approves Core Beliefs". Sioux County Index Reporter. Retrieved October 6, 2014.
  3. ^ a b c "Boyden-Hull High School Directory Information". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved January 18, 2014.
  4. ^ a b "Course Selections Are Modified, Approved". Sioux County Index Reporter. New Century Press. January 18, 2012. Retrieved January 15, 2014.
  5. ^ "High School CEEB Codes Listed Alphabetically" (PDF). Appalachian State University. Archived from the original (PDF) on December 22, 2014. Retrieved January 15, 2014.
  6. ^ "Boyden-Hull High School". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved December 13, 2018.
  7. ^ "Boyden-Hull Proposal Okayed". Hawarden Independent. January 1, 1959. Retrieved February 28, 2020.
  8. ^ Price, W. K. (October 1, 1959). "Report Of Progress In The School Reorganization". The Boyden Reporter. Retrieved January 16, 2014 – via Newspapers.com. Three more community school districts became effective in Sioux County On July 1, 1959. ...Boyden-Hull Community School District which includes th[e] former independent districts of Boyden and Hull and part or all of nine former rural township districts in Sioux and Lyon Counties
  9. ^ "Results Of First BoydenHull School Director Election". Sioux County Index. March 19, 1959. Retrieved August 10, 2017.
  10. ^ "Boyden Hull Community School Will Open August 31". Sioux County Index. August 27, 1959. Retrieved August 10, 2017.
  11. ^ "Feeling nifty at 50". Sioux County Index-Reporter. New Century Press. July 14, 2010. Archived from the original on May 7, 2014. Retrieved March 21, 2014.
  12. ^ "[no title]". Hawarden Independent. January 9, 1941. Retrieved April 23, 2020. {{cite news}}: Cite uses generic title (help)
  13. ^ a b "1905-58 IHSAA MEMBERS SCHOOLS - COLORS, MA SCOTS, CURRENT ATTENDANCE CENTERS" (PDF). Iowa High School Athletic Association. March 28, 2014. Retrieved June 11, 2019.
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