Buffalo Center Community School District

Former school district in Iowa

Buffalo Center Community School District was a school district serving Buffalo Center, Iowa. The district served sections of Kossuth and Winnebago counties. It was formed on July 1, 1954, by the merger of five school districts, each having a one-room school house, with one being in Kossuth County and the remaining ones in Winnebago County.[1] One of the districts was the Buffalo Center Consolidated School District.[2] The merger into the Buffalo Center Community District was approved by a vote held on December 10, 1953. In August 1954 the district board voted to establish a single centralized school for the entire district.[1]

The Buffalo Center district and the Rake Community School District began sharing a superintendent, with the Buffalo Center superintendent taking the role, on July 1, 1975. At the time no other school district in Iowa had made this kind of arrangement. In 1977 the two districts proposed a merger, but the referendum to do so was voted down; the subsequent January 1978 referendum to do so passed. William H. Dreier of the University of Northern Iowa and Ronald Pilgrim, superintendent of Buffalo Center–Rake–Lakota Community School District, wrote that the 1977 vote failed by "a slim margin" but that the Buffalo Center district voters and Rake district voters "overwhelmingly approved" the 1978 referendum.[1] The merger with the Rake district into the Buffalo Center–Rake Community School District took place on July 1, 1978.[3]

References

  1. ^ a b c Dreier, William H.; Ronald Pilgrim (1995-10-06). "100 Years of Change for Better Schools: A Short Report of Buffalo Township, Winnebago County, Iowa and Its Schools from 1895 to 1995" (PDF). Education Resources Information Center. p. 7. Retrieved 2019-08-02.
  2. ^ Dreier, William H.; Ronald Pilgrim (1995-10-06). "100 Years of Change for Better Schools: A Short Report of Buffalo Township, Winnebago County, Iowa and Its Schools from 1895 to 1995" (PDF). Education Resources Information Center. p. 11. Retrieved 2019-08-02.
  3. ^ "REORGANIZATION & DISSOLUTION ACTIONS SINCE 1965-66." Iowa Department of Education. Retrieved on July 20, 2018.
  • 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