Greenfield Community School District

Defunct school district in Iowa, United States

Greenfield Community School District was[when?] a school district headquartered in Greenfield, Iowa, United States.

It entered a grade-sharing agreement with the Bridgewater–Fontanelle Community School District. Bridgewater–Fontanelle hosted the joint middle school and Greenfield hosted the joint high school.[1] The latter, Nodaway Valley High School, opened in 1993.[2] Circa 1998 the two districts had a combined total of 77 teachers and 920 students.[1]

On September 14, 1999, residents of the Greenfield and Bridgewater–Fontanelle districts voted to consolidate them into a new district.[3] On July 1, 2000, it merged with Bridgewater–Fontanelle to form the Nodaway Valley Community School District.[4]

References

  1. ^ a b "School info". Greenfield and Bridgewater-Fontanelle Schools. 1998-04-28. Archived from the original on 1998-04-28. Retrieved 2019-08-03.
  2. ^ Peterson, Larry (June 28, 2012). "Orient-Macksburg scrambles to find a new conference home". Creston News Advertiser. Archived from the original on May 6, 2014. Retrieved May 6, 2014.
  3. ^ "District Information". Nodaway Valley Community School District. 2006-08-29. Archived from the original on 2006-08-29. Retrieved 2019-08-03.
  4. ^ "REORGANIZATION & DISSOLUTION ACTIONS SINCE 1965-66." Iowa Department of Education. Retrieved on July 20, 2018.

External links

  • 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
Stub icon

This Iowa school-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e