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South Lincoln High School

Coordinates: 43°05′43″N 79°32′56″W / 43.0952°N 79.5490°W / 43.0952; -79.5490
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
South Lincoln High School
Address
Map
260 Canborough Street

Smithville
,
Ontario
,
Canada
Coordinates43°05′43″N 79°32′56″W / 43.0952°N 79.5490°W / 43.0952; -79.5490
Information
School typeSecondary School
Founded1954
School boardDistrict School Board of Niagara
Grades9-12
LanguageEnglish
AreaSmithville, Ontario
Colour(s)Purple and Gold
MascotBears
Websitesouthlincoln.dsbn.org

South Lincoln High School was a secondary school in Smithville, Ontario, Canada.

In 2017 it had about 230 students.[1]

Closure

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The school closed for the 2017-2018 school year due to the DSBN plans to building one high school for all three West-Niagara Secondary Schools.[citation needed] It closed while many rural schools in the province were threatened with closure.[2] Students unsuccessfully campaigned against its closure.[1] In January 2019, the school building opened as the new Smithville Public School, replacing the existing College Street School.

In the interim, students from College Street (later Smithville Public) and Caistor Central elementary schools were assigned to Grimsby Secondary School. Graduates of Gainsborough Central were sent to E.L. Crossley Secondary School.

Trivia

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South Lincoln High School was the third and last public high school located in Smithville, Ontario. The first high school was an ungraded one room school, part of the three-room Canborough Street School. The second, known as Smithville High School, was replaced by South Lincoln in 1954.

Like its predecessors, South Lincoln became an elementary school once secondary education was discontinued at the site.

References

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  1. ^ a b Gollom, Mark (2017-06-19). "How rural school closures are 'ripping the heart out of the community'". CBC News. Retrieved 2019-07-31. - Also at Rural Policy Learning Commons
  2. ^ Thompson, Nicole (2018-06-02). "Rural school closures hit some communities hard, main parties pledge action". National Post. The Canadian Press. Retrieved 2019-07-31. - also at CBC News
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