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New Burnside HS Building - 2007 |
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Photo By Jamie Driskill |
New Burnside High School - Front Angle View |
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Submitted by Jamie Driskill - 2007 |
The History of New Burnside High School
New Burnside (population 242) is located in the far-southern portion of Illinois in northeastern
Johnson County. The town is situated about 15 miles southeast of Marion and 25 miles southeast of Carbondale.
U.S. Route 45 is the main roadway leading to and from New Burnside while Illinois Route 166 gets its start in town.
Pond Creek flows through town. The Conrail Railroad has tracks that travel through New Burnside as well.
The history of New Burnside and its high school is in need of research. A brief history of the town of New Burnside
can be viewed at http://www.nostalgiaville.com/travel/Illinois/newburnside/new%20burnside%20il.htm. Our guess is that New Burnside had a school in place by the late 1800s. It is probable that a high
school was established by the late 1800s or early 1900s. Our best guess is that New Burnside High School served
the community for several years. It may have been in the late 1940s, possibly even later, that New Burnside High School
closed her doors.
After its' use as a high school, the school building was used as a grade school for kids from New Burnside and the
neighboring towns of Simpson and Ozark. It incorporated grades 4-8. It was discontinued as a grade school in the
early 1990's. The New Burnside High School building was still standing as recently as July of 2013. The
New Burnside kids now attend school in Vienna.
New Burnside School Building 1880s |
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Submitted by Marilyn Meisenheimer |
The following memories from attending New Burnside school in the 1940s/50s were provided by Ruth
Eilers:
" Our family moved to New Burnside in 1945
when I was 4 years
old. We moved there from a small house
somewhere near Parker City,
Ill which was already a ghost
town. My paternal grandfather worked for
the railroad in Parker
City.
I am the second oldest of 7 children and we
all attended the
school in New Burnside. It had been a
high school in an earlier time; my dad attended high school there and played
basketball although he did not graduate. At the time we moved to New Burnside,
several country schools had already closed and country kids came to school
there. I don’t remember busses, so don’t
know how they got to school.
The small farm we moved to was adjacent to
the school
property. Prior to our arrival a small
piece of this land was sold to the school to build a reservoir to hold water
for the building. While there was water
to the building, there were no inside restrooms. There were two outhouses, one
for the boys
and one for the girls. I can still
picture the entire building which had two floors. In my child’s eye, it
was a very large
building. One walked up several steps to
the double doors in the center of the building, then either up a wide set of
steps to the classrooms or down a more narrow set of steps to the level where
the kitchen, eating area, janitors room and furnace was. A hot lunch was available,
I don’t remember
what it cost; we seldom got to eat there as we lived close enough to walk home for
lunch-it was just across the pasture and through the back yard to our kitchen
door. It was a special treat when we did
get to eat hot lunch, usually only on really bad weather days. In the hall
outside the kitchen was a long metal sink with 4 or 5 faucets along the length
of the sink where anyone having lunch there had to wash their hands first, in
cold water as there was no hot water. The other way to school was down the
road, around the corner and up a long hill, probably no more than 4 blocks from
our house but it seemed a long way when the building was just across our
pasture but when the field was wet it was pretty muddy around the small creek
we had to cross on a board placed across it by our dad.
Upstairs the building was divided into two
classrooms, one
for grades 1-4 and another for grades 5-8 each with a cloakroom where we put
our coats and boots if we had them. Mr.
Yandall was the principal and taught the upper grades, Miss Burris taught
grades 1-4. I still have some of my
report cards. There was a gymnasium with a stage where our Christmas operetta
was presented for the community each year, in 8th grade I got to be
the angel and wear a beautiful white dress. There was also a community wide
Halloween party in the gym for many years.
Adults as well as kids came in costume and we all walked around the
perimeter of the gym in a parade hoping to be chosen for the best costume of
the year. Baked treats, coffee and kool
aid was provided by parents. The gym was
in back of the building with an entrance on one side, it must have been built
on some time after the original building went up. Bleachers pulled out from
the side of the gym
floor. The school really was a community
center.
Other memories:
We had a boys basketball team and a softball
team. Any girl in the upper grades who wanted to,
could be a cheerleader. My mom made
several skirts for us, red and white circle skirts below our knees with red
bloomers we had to wear under them (we were not supposed to twirl around enough
for bloomers to show-Mr. Randall’s rule).
I think we were the New Burnside hawks.
I remember a sand table in the room when I
was in first
grade where we could go play at certain times while other grades were having
lessons. My first trouble in school came
in first grade when my enthusiasm at the sand table caused sand to fly into
another girls hair. I had to leave the
table and sit at my desk, humiliated; I didn’t do it on purpose!
A bookmobile came to the school sometimes,
we could check
books out to keep until it came back around.
At the end of
the school year, the 7th and 8th
grade students were taken to Ft.
Massac state park near
Metropolis for a day. We took a sack
lunch and traveled there in the back of an enclosed truck, it must have
belonged to a parent, I’m not sure. I
remember we all sat around the inside, leaning against the back sides and it
all seemed quite exciting to be going so far for a day away from school. There
were probably no more than 10 or 12 of
us in the two grades and a teacher or two along to supervise.
New Burnside High School Quick
Facts
Year opened:
late 1800s / early 1900s
Year closed: 1949?
Consolidated to:
Vienna High School
New Burnside HS team nickname: "Hawks"
NBHS team colors:
Red & White
School Fight Song:
unavailable
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Athletics
New Burnside High School offered basketball for sure, this is confirmed on the IHSA website (www.ihsa.org). It is probable that baseball and track were also offered. School team nickname, team colors, fight
song, consolidation information, team records, and coach's names are all items being sought at this time.
New Burnside Gymnasium & School 2015 |
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The
photos below are of the interior of the New Burnside High School gymnasium taken in July of 2013.
New Burnside HS Gym Bleachers 2013 |
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Served as New Simpson Hill School for a Time |
New Burnside Gymnasium 2013 |
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Boys Basketball
The New Burnside boys brought home a total of two District titles. Unfortunately this is
the extent of the information we currently have on the NBHS boys basketball team. Team records and coach's names of
these and other great New Burnside teams are needed. IHSA postseason basketball tournament scores were found on
a website titled "Illinois Postseason Basketball Scores."
1933-34
Metropolis District Tourney Coach's name & record
needed
Lost to Metropolis 51-12
1934-35
Metropolis District Tourney Coach's name & record
needed
Lost to Vienna 17-15
1935-36
Ridgway District Tourney Coach's
name & record needed
Lost to Broughton 22-7
1936-37
IHSA District Champions! Coach's name
& record needed
District scores needed
Eldorado Regional Tourney
1st Rd. - Beat Eldorado 32-27
Semi-final - lost to Marion 38-24
Marion won Regional tourney
Maron lost in 1st Rd of Sectional.
1937-38
New Burnside District Runner-Up Coach's name & record needed.
Title Game - Lost to Joppa 29-17
1938-39 Postseason scores, record, coach's name needed
1939-40 Postseason scores, record, coach's name needed
1940-41
IHSA District Champions! Coach's
name & record needed
Semi-final
Beat New Columbia 42-22 Title
Game beat Crab Orchard 25-24
Metropolis Regional Tournament
1st Rd lost to Vienna 39-34
Vienna lost to Metropolis in title game
1941-42 through closing of school season records, postseason scores, and coaches names needed.
MEMORIES
**From
Amanda Smith Benton:
"My
family moved to a farm outside of New Burnside in 1949. We didn't own a
camera, so I have no pictures. My best friend, at the time, was a girl who
moved to New Burnside to a nice bungalow on the corner from me. Her father
had become a Church of Christ minister. My friend's name was Heather Hollingsworth. I also have a friend, June Dalton Schuey, and Grant Hollingsworth.
Heather and I observed the 7th and 8th grade
classroom one day when
the consolidated high school at Vienna was out. It was being taught by a Mr.
Yandell. The year was probably 1951. Since the county consolidated
all the small high
schools into one, the New Burnside school became a grade school. There are 4
classrooms for 2 grades each. The gym is adequate for basketball games.
---I hate to
see the desecration of the classrooms and gymnasium.
It was a wonderful building, and at one time,
was the Senior
Citizen's center for the area. The county built a new grade school on highway
45 south combining Simpson, New Burnside and Tunnel Hill naming it "New Simpson
Hill", so the old
school stands empty now.
Wyatt's General Store burned down many years ago.
Randall Taylor's service station is gone, too. Jimmy Taylor still lives there
and so does
Jack Deaton. They, if still living, would be 77 or 78. Jack has an older
sister, Irene Deaton George of Vienna, Illinois.
New Burnside had many apple orchards.
One family of apple growers
was headed by Fred Heaton. Another grower of the hamlet, Ozark was L.M.
Smith.
I'm truly sorry that I have no pictures,
as my husband and I are avid photographers now. I just remembered another family: John W. Womack, 1755 Dry
Creek Rd., Ozark, Illinois. He may have stopped farming by now."
Need Your Assistance
If you have any further information regarding the New Burnside High School accomplishments,
and not just in athletics, please write to us so we may share it with others. We especially enjoy photos of the old
school building and great teams and individuals. You can e-mail these items to us at ihsgdwebsite@comcast.net. You can also write to us at:
Illinois HS Glory Days
6439 N. Neva St.
Chicago, Il. 60631
New Burnside School School Building Side View |
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New Burnside Gym - Side View 2015 |
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New Burnside School Building 1880s |
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Submitted by Marilyn Meisenheimer |
New Burnside HS Classroom 2013 |
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New Burnside HS Classroom 2013 |
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New Burnside High School Building |
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http://www.nostalgiaville.com/travel/Illinois/newburnside/new%20burnside%20il.htm |
New Burnside School Front 2015 |
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