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Lumberjack Conference

Former Wisconsin high school athletic conference From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The Lumberjack Conference is a former high school athletic conference with its membership concentrated in north central Wisconsin. Originating as a football-only conference in 1946, the Lumberjack Conference competed as an all-sport conference from 1953 to 2008. All member schools belonged to the Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association.

History

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1946-1953

The Lumberjack Conference was organized in 1946 as a football-only conference by a group of small- to medium-sized schools in north central Wisconsin.[1] Original members were Medford, Mosinee, Stanley, Tomahawk and the "B" team from Wausau High School. In 1948, Wausau "B" left the conference and were replaced by Nekoosa High School, formerly of the Wisconsin Valley Conference.[2] Stanley left the league in 1950 to join their primary home (the Cloverbelt Conference) for football and were replaced by Park Falls and Phillips.[3] By 1951, conference officials began discussing sponsorship of sports other than football, contingent upon Nekoosa and Tomahawk leaving the larger Wisconsin Valley Conference.[4] Park Falls left the Lumberjack Conference in 1952 to become an all-sport member of the Michigan-Wisconsin Conference (which they already belonged to for basketball).[5] Nekoosa followed them out to join the South Central Conference, and the Lumberjack was down to four members for the 1952 football season.[6] In 1953, the newly opened D.C. Everest High School in Schofield was accepted into the Lumberjack Conference as its fifth football member.[7]

1953-1976

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31miles
Phillips
Mosinee
Medford
D.C. Everest
Location of Original Lumberjack Conference Members

A few months after D.C. Everest was welcomed into the Lumberjack Conference, the loop elected to sponsor additional sports, starting with basketball in the 1953–54 school year.[8] Four of the football members (D.C. Everest, Medford, Mosinee and Phillips) would compete in the inaugural season. The fifth football member, Tomahawk, joined the Lumberjack the next year as a full member after leaving the Wisconsin Valley Conference.[9] Park Falls joined the conference in 1955 after their exit from the Michigan-Wisconsin Conference.[10] In 1957, D.C. Everest left the Lumberjack Conference when they were invited to join the Wisconsin Valley Conference.[11] They were replaced by Lakeland Union High School in Minocqua (formerly of the Northern Lakes Conference) in 1958,[12] and the conference remained a six-member circuit for fifteen years. Ashland and Hurley joined the Lumberjack in 1973, leading to the dissolution of the Michigan-Wisconsin Conference.[13]

1976-2008

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Tomahawk
Phillips
Park Falls
Northland Pines
Nekoosa
Mosinee
Medford
Lakeland Union
Hurley
Colby
Auburndale
Ashland
Location of Lumberjack Conference Members (1976-1978)

In 1976, the Lumberjack Conference added four schools: Auburndale, Colby, Nekoosa and Northland Pines in Eagle River. Auburndale and Nekoosa were former members of the Marawood Conference, Colby came from the Cloverbelt Conference, and Northland Pines was late of the Northern Lakes Conference. To accommodate the expansion of the Lumberjack to twelve member schools, the conference subdivided into North and South Divisions:[14][15]

More information North Division, South Division ...
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Tomahawk
Phillips
Park Falls
Northland Pines
Medford
Lakeland Union
Location of Final Lumberjack Conference Members

This alignment would be short-lived, as four schools left the Lumberjack to join the Cloverbelt Conference in 1978: Auburndale, Colby, Mosinee and Nekoosa. Mosinee had long wanted out of the Lumberjack because of the long travel distances they experienced as members of the conference and were closer to their new rivals in the Cloverbelt.[16] The conference went back down to a single division and continued as an eight-member conference until Hurley left in 1980 to join with former rivals in the Michigan-Wisconsin Conference to form the Gogebic Range Conference.[17][18][19] After the 2002 season, the Lumberjack Conference ended sponsorship of football,[20] in part due to Phillips's abrupt exit from the football roster before the season started.[21] The remaining seven full members continued on until Ashland left the Lumberjack Conference in 2006 to join the Lake Superior Conference, a Minnesota-based conference that included nearby Superior High School as members.[22] The Lumberjack played on with six members until 2008, when the conference was dissolved. Four of its member schools (Lakeland Union, Medford, Northland Pines and Tomahawk) were founding members of the Great Northern Conference,[23] and the other two schools (Park Falls and Phillips) joined the Marawood Conference. Park Falls High School would close in 2009 after consolidation with Glidden to form Chequamegon High School.[24]

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Conference membership history

Full members

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Football-only members

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Membership timeline

Full members

 North Division  South Division

Football members

 North Division  South Division

List of state champions

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Fall sports

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Winter sports

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Spring sports

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List of conference champions

Boys Basketball

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Girls Basketball

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Football

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References

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