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Skyline High School (Idaho)
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Skyline High School |
| location | 1767 Blue Sky Drive |
| city | Idaho Falls |
| state | Idaho |
| image | smallpaw1234.jpg |
| enrollment | 1,320 (2023–2024) |
| district | Idaho Falls School District#91 |
| athletics | IHSAA Class 5A |
| conference | High Country (5A) |
| established | 1968, |
| country | United States |
| type | Public |
| principal | Joshua Newell |
| teaching_staff | 68.55 (FTE) |
| ratio | 19.26 |
| grades | 9–12 |
| mascot | Grizzly |
| colors | Navy blue, white, & Columbia blue |
| rival | Idaho Falls |
| yearbook | Behemoth |
| feeders | Eagle Rock Middle School |
| free_label | Elevation |
| free_text | 4700 ft AMSL |
| website |

Skyline High School is a four-year public secondary school in Idaho Falls, Idaho, one of two traditional high schools of the Idaho Falls School District #91. The school opened in 1968 on the west side of Idaho Falls, west of the Snake River. The school colors are navy blue, white, and Columbia blue, and the mascot is a grizzly.
History
Skyline was the second high school established in Idaho Falls, following Idaho Falls High School (IFHS), and the third in the Idaho Falls area after Bonneville High School.
Skyline High School was created in the fall of 1966, but due to incomplete construction, neither of the first two graduating classes (1967 or 1968) actually attended classes at the high school. Those students attended split sessions at Idaho Falls High School during both the 1966–67 and 1967–68 school years. IFHS students attended school in the morning, and Skyline students attended in the afternoon. The class of 1969 was the first to attend and graduate from the new building. The first principal of Skyline was Richard C. Bigelow.
The school was originally planned to be built on the southeast side of Idaho Falls along Sunnyside Road, where the majority of the new students lived. However, due to immense protests by residents on the west side of town, the school was built on the west side, i.e., west of the Snake River. When Skyline was completed, it was thought of as the "country" school, because it was located away from the populated area. In the following decades the town grew to surround the high school. It was named after Skyline Drive, a major artery in Idaho Falls that ran from the Idaho Falls Airport to the edge of the high school. The street was named in the early 1950s by Margaret Cope Johns who with her husband Merritt Miller Johns developed the Johns Addition.
In 2012, Idaho Falls School District #91 made a change to the school system. Clair E. Gale Jr. High School did not have the students to stay open. The district made Clair E. Gale into a magnet high school, called Compass Academy. This caused the freshman to be moved into the high schools, with Skyline and Idaho IFHS serving grades 9 through 12, rather than grades 10 through 12 as they had previously done. The change caused Eagle Rock and Taylorview Jr. High to become middle schools. School service borders were also changed.
Athletics
Skyline competes in athletics in IHSAA Class 4A. It is currently a member of the High Country Conference (5A), competing against Idaho Falls, Pocatello, Preston, Century, Hillcrest, Bonneville, and Blackfoot.
Football
Skyline's primary sports rival is the crosstown Idaho Falls High School (IFHS). The schools share an outdoor football and track stadium adjacent to IFHS named Ravsten Stadium, named for Vernon Ravsten, the first coach of Skyline but who had transferred from Idaho Falls. Each year the schools face off in a football game to decide the color of the goal posts at Ravsten Stadium (orange for Idaho Falls or blue for Skyline). The event has come to be known as the Emotion Bowl. The rivalry between the two schools became very intense, and even garnered national attention. Local officials saw the need to lessen the intensity, which was accomplished by rescheduling the game from the traditional end-of-season game on a Saturday afternoon to earlier in the season. This had the calming effect that the officials were looking for. In 2014 the game returned to the last Saturday of the high school football season, but that change was not permanent — e.g., in 2022 the game was played in late September.
State titles
Boys
- Football (9): fall (A-1 Div II, now 5A) 1985, 1986, 1989, 1992, (4A, now 5A) 2016, 2017, 2020, 2021, 2022 (official with introduction of playoffs, fall 1979)
- (unofficial poll titles – 0) (poll introduced in 1963, through 1978)
- Cross Country (2): fall 1997, 2016, 2024
- Basketball (2): 1971, 1989
- Wrestling (6): 1977, 1978, 1981, 1982, 1984, 2002
- Track and Field (1): 2019
Girls
- Volleyball (2): fall 1979, 2000*(introduced in 1976)*
- Track (2): 1992, 1993 (introduced in 1971)
- Cross Country (1): 2017
Gallery
File:Skyline High School Idaho Falls.jpg|Skyline High School in Idaho Falls File:Skyline High School rear entrance.jpg|Skyline High School front entrance
References
References
- "SKYLINE SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL". National Center for Education Statistics.
- "Idaho High School Activities Association". IHSAA.
- "Skyline Senior High School". Public School Review.
- "Skyline High School". Idaho Falls School District 91.
- "Richard Bigelow: 1931-2022". Legacy.com.
- (2006-10-04). "Emotion Bowl Wins and Scores".
- Dubois, Joey. (2022-09-22). "Skyline Wins 58th Annual Emotion Bowl Over Idaho Falls". KPVI6 news.
- "Idaho high school football – state champions".
- "Cross Country champions through 2011".
- "Basketball champions – through 2012".
- "Wrestling champions – through 2012".
- (September 11, 2019). "boys state track champions".
- "Volleyball & Soccer champions – through 2011".
- (May 2018). "Track champions – through 2011 }}{{dead link".
- (September 11, 2019). "Past Champions/Records".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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