Huttig School District

Defunct school district in Arkansas, United States

Huttig School District #60[1] was a school district headquartered in Huttig, Arkansas.

It operated Huttig Elementary School and Huttig High School. Circa 2004 it had 240 students.[2]

By 2004 new laws were passed requiring school districts with enrollments below 350 to consolidate with other school districts. Huttig was one of several districts that were unable to find another district willing to consolidate with it, so the Arkansas Board of Education was to forcibly consolidate it.[3] On July 1, 2004, it consolidated with the Strong School District to form the Strong-Huttig School District.[4]

References

  1. ^ "HUTTIG SCHOOL DISTRICT #60 REGULAR BOARD MEETING AUGUST 18, 2003." Huttig School District. Retrieved on May 27, 2018.
  2. ^ Home. Huttig School District. February 4,2004. Retrieved on May 27, 2018.
  3. ^ Albanese, Elizabeth (2004-04-05). "Arkansas School District Takes Stand Against Consolidation". Bond Buyer. Retrieved 2018-06-02.
  4. ^ "ConsolidationAnnex_from_1983.xls." Arkansas Department of Education. Retrieved on May 26, 2018.

Further reading

These maps include predecessor districts
  • Map of Arkansas School Districts pre-July 1, 2004
  • "Arkansas Department of Education school district maps, 1952-1954 Union County, 1952-1954". Arkansas Digital Archives. Arkansas State Archives. (Download)

External links

  • Huttig School District at the Wayback Machine (archive index)
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Defunct school districts in Arkansas since 1983
Most of the districts merged into other districts; dissolutions, in which the district was divided among other districts, are marked in italics.
1980s
  • 1983: Coal Hill/Hartman
  • Cloverbend
  • Plum Bayou
  • 1984: Dell
  • Greenway/Rector (former)
  • Lafe
  • Leachville/Monette
  • Linwood
  • Portland
  • 1985: Banks
  • Beedeville
  • Belleville/Havana
  • Big Flat/Fifty Six
  • Bodcaw, Cale, Laneburg, Oakgrove/Willisville
  • Caraway/Lake City
  • Desha
  • Floral/Pleasant Plains
  • Glendale
  • Grapevine
  • Knobel
  • New Edinburg
  • Oak Grove/Paragould (former)
  • Oxford/Violet Hill
  • Ross Van Ness
  • St. Charles
  • Thornton
  • 1986: Common
  • Etowah
  • Gilham
  • Lepanto/Tyronza
  • Luxora
  • Oakland
  • Village
  • Wilmot
  • 1987: Chidester
  • Okolona
  • Palestine/Wheatley
  • Wilmar
1990s
  • 1990: Garland
  • Oil Trough
  • Washington
  • Wilmar
  • Camden (October 16)
  • 1991: Griffithville, Judsonia,/Kensett
  • Enola/Mount Vernon
  • 1992: Winthrop
  • Poughkeepsie/Strawberry
  • 1993: Desha-Drew
  • Grubbs/Tuckerman
  • Tri-County
  • Wabbaseka-Tucker (September 1)
  • 1994: Parkdale
  • Prattsville
  • Stanford
  • 1995: Amity/Glenwood
  • 1998: Humnoke
2000s
2010s2020s
Consolidation/dissolution dates are July 1 of that year unless otherwise stated


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