7-C Conference

Former Wisconsin high school athletic conference From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 7-C Conference is a former high school athletic conference with its membership concentrated in central Wisconsin. It existed from 1926 to 1962, and its members belonged to the Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association.

History

1926–1934

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Wild Rose
Westfield
Wautoma
Redgranite
Plainfield
Oxford
Montello
Hancock
Friendship
Coloma
Almond
Location of Original 7-C Conference Members

The 7-C Conference was formed in 1926 as the Four-County Conference, named after the four counties where member schools were located (Adams, Marquette, Portage and Waushara). It was initially made up of eleven small schools located in central Wisconsin: Almond, Coloma, Friendship, Hancock, Montello, Oxford, Plainfield, Redgranite, Wautoma, Westfield and Wild Rose.[1] In 1929, Friendship High School merged with neighboring Adams High School to form the new Adams-Friendship High School, which retained Friendship's membership in the conference.[2] That same year, the Four-County Conference added Neshkoro and Princeton to bring membership to thirteen schools.[3] Despite the expansion into Green Lake County, the league did not change its name. Green Lake and Omro joined the 4-C Conference in 1931, and Winneconne became members of the conference in 1932. That same year, the conference's name was changed to the 6-C Conference, representing its expanded geographic footprint:[4]

More information Big 6-C Conference, Little 6-C Conference ...
Big 6-C Conference Little 6-C Conference
Adams-Friendship Almond
Montello Coloma
Omro Green Lake
Redgranite Hancock
Wautoma Neshkoro
Westfield Oxford
Plainfield
Princeton
Wild Rose
Winneconne
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1934–1942

In 1934 the conference renamed itself the 7-C Conference because of the expansion into Wood County, adding Markesan to the Little 7-C[5] and Port Edwards (formerly of the Wood County League) to the Big 7-C.[6] Winneconne left to join the Little Nine Conference in 1935,[7] and in 1937, the 7-C Conference realigned itself by geography instead of enrollment size:[8]

More information Eastern 7-C Conference, Northern 7-C Conference ...
Eastern 7-C Conference[9] Northern 7-C Conference[10] Western 7-C Conference[11]
Green Lake Almond Adams-Friendship
Markesan Coloma Montello
Omro Hancock Plainfield
Princeton Neshkoro Port Edwards
Redgranite Oxford Wautoma
Wild Rose Westfield
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30km
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Wild Rose
Westfield
Wautoma
Redgranite
Plainfield
Princeton
Port Edwards
Oxford
Omro
Neshkoro
Montello
Markesan
Hancock
Green Lake
Endeavor
Coloma
Almond
Adams-Friendship
Location of 7-C Conference Members (1938-1940)

Endeavor joined the 7-C Conference in 1938 as its eighteenth overall member, and was assigned to the Northern 7-C.[12] In 1940, Wild Rose moved back to the Eastern 7-C after Omro's exit from the conference:[13]

More information Eastern 7-C Conference, Northern 7-C Conference ...
Eastern 7-C Conference Northern 7-C Conference Western 7-C Conference
Green Lake Almond Adams-Friendship
Markesan Coloma Montello
Princeton Endeavor Plainfield
Redgranite Hancock Port Edwards
Wild Rose Neshkoro Wautoma
Oxford Westfield
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1942–1946

In 1942, the 7-C Conference disbanded for basketball because of wartime travel issues.[14] The conference was revived for the 1943-44 school year, albeit with a reduced grouping of Adams-Friendship, Almond, Hancock, Plainfield, Port Edwards, Wautoma and Westfield.[15] Former conference member Montello returned to the 7-C in 1944[16] along with several other schools, and the league split into two divisions by school enrollment size:

More information Big 7-C Conference, Little 7-C Conference ...
Big 7-C Conference[17] Little 7-C Conference[18][19]
Adams-Friendship Coloma
Almond Endeavor
Montello Green Lake
Plainfield Hancock
Port Edwards Markesan
Wautoma Oxford
Westfield Princeton
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In 1945, the league welcomed back former members Omro and Wild Rose after the end of World War II.[20] These two schools, along with Green Lake from the Little 7-C, were placed into the Big 7-C. The Little 7-C was left with five members following Green Lake's move and Markesan joining the Dual County Conference.[21] The 7-C Conference also began sponsoring football with four conference members participating: Adams-Friendship, Omro, Wautoma and Westfield.[22][23] Neshkoro was reinstated as a sixth member to the Little 7-C before the start of league competition, and the 7-C started the 1945-46 season with a sixteen-member roster:[24]

More information Big 7-C Conference, Little 7-C Conference ...
Big 7-C Conference[25] Little 7-C Conference[24]
Adams-Friendship Coloma
Almond Endeavor
Green Lake Hancock
Montello Neshkoro
Omro Oxford
Plainfield Princeton
Port Edwards
Wautoma
Westfield
Wild Rose
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1946–1962

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Westfield
Wautoma
Tri-County
Adams-Friendship
Location of Final 7-C Conference Members

After the end of World War II, the 7-C Conference began to lose members to school district consolidation. Coloma was the first to leave the conference for this reason, with their district folded into Westfield in 1946.[26] To offset this loss, the Little 7-C added former members Redgranite and Wild Rose after the latter's shift from the Big 7-C.[27] The next year, Hancock and Plainfield merged to form the new Tri-County High School in Plainfield.[28] Almond moved over from the Big 7-C as their replacement.[29] In 1948, the 7-C Conference lost two high schools to consolidation: Neshkoro (redistricted to Westfield)[30] and Redgranite (redistricted to Berlin and Wautoma).[31] In 1951, Endeavor High School closed its doors when it was consolidated into Oxford.[32] That same year, Green Lake of the Big 7-C joined the four Little 7-C schools in seceding from the conference to form the new Central Lakes Conference.[33][34] The seven members of what was formerly known as the Big 7-C continued on until Omro left to join the Little Nine Conference in 1956.[35] Membership was whittled down to five schools in 1958 when Port Edwards left to join the Central Lakes Conference.[36] Montello joined the Dual County Conference in 1961,[37] further decreasing conference membership to four schools. Due in part to the rapid decline in membership, the 7-C Conference ceased operations in 1962. Three of its former members (Adams-Friendship, Tri-County and Westfield) aligned with the five Central Lakes Conference schools and Madonna High School in Mauston to form the new Central-C Conference.[38] The fourth school (Wautoma) joined the Central Wisconsin Conference[39] in the aftermath of the 7-C Conference's demise.

Conference membership history

Final members

More information School, Location ...
School Location Affiliation Mascot Colors Joined Left Conference Joined Current Conference
Adams-Friendship Adams, WI Public Green Devils     1929,[2] 1943[15] 1942,[14] 1962[39] Central-C South Central
Tri-County Plainfield, WI Public Penguins       1947[28] 1962[39] Central-C Central Wisconsin
Wautoma Wautoma, WI Public Hornets     1926,[1] 1943[15] 1942,[14] 1962[39] Central Wisconsin South Central
Westfield Westfield, WI Public Pioneers     1926,[1] 1943[15] 1942,[14] 1962[39] Central-C South Central
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Previous members

More information School, Location ...
School Location Affiliation Mascot Colors Joined Left Conference Joined Current Conference
Almond Almond, WI Public Eagles     1926,[1] 1943[15] 1942,[14] 1951[33][34] Central Lakes Central Wisconsin
Coloma Coloma, WI Public Cardinals     1926,[1] 1944[18][19] 1942,[14] 1946[26] Closed (consolidated into Westfield)
Endeavor Endeavor, WI Public Cardinals     1938,[12] 1944[18][19] 1942,[14] 1951[32] Central Lakes Closed in 1954 (consolidated into Portage)
Friendship Friendship, WI Public Gladiators Unknown 1926[1] 1929[2] Closed (merged into Adams-Friendship)
Green Lake Green Lake, WI Public Lakers     1931,[4] 1944[18][19] 1942,[14] 1951[33][34] Central Lakes Trailways (coop with Princeton)
Hancock Hancock, WI Public Unknown     1926,[1] 1943[15] 1942,[14] 1947[28] Closed (merged into Tri-County)
Markesan Markesan, WI Public Hornets     1934,[5] 1944[18][19] 1942,[14] 1945[21] Dual County Trailways
Montello Montello, WI Public Hilltoppers     1926,[1] 1944[16] 1942,[14] 1961[37] Dual County Trailways
Neshkoro Neshkoro, WI Public Unknown     1929,[3] 1944[18][19] 1942,[14] 1948[30] Closed (consolidated into Westfield)
Omro Omro, WI Public Foxes     1931,[4] 1945[20] 1940,[13] 1956[35] Little Nine Wisconsin Flyway
Oxford Oxford, WI Public Unknown     1926,[1] 1944[18][19] 1942,[14] 1951[33][34] Central Lakes Closed in 1963 (consolidated into Westfield)
Plainfield Plainfield, WI Public Eagles     1926,[1] 1943[15] 1942,[14] 1947[28] Closed (merged into Tri-County)
Port Edwards Port Edwards, WI Public Blackhawks     1934,[6] 1943[15] 1942,[14] 1958[36] Central Lakes Central Wisconsin
Princeton Princeton, WI Public Tigers     1929,[3] 1944[18][19] 1942,[14] 1951[33][34] Central Lakes Trailways (coop with Green Lake)
Redgranite Redgranite, WI Public Demons     1926,[1] 1946[27] 1942,[14] 1948[31] Closed (consolidated into Berlin and Wautoma)
Wild Rose Wild Rose, WI Public Wildcats     1926,[1] 1945[20] 1942,[14] 1951[33][34] Central Lakes Central Wisconsin
Winneconne Winneconne, WI Public Wolves     1932[4] 1935[7] Little Nine Bay
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Membership timeline

Full members

 Big 4-C/6-C/7-C  Little 4-C/6-C/7-C  Eastern 7-C  Northern 7-C  Western 7-C

Football members

List of state champions

Fall sports

None

Winter sports

None

Spring sports

More information School, Year ...
Boys Track & Field
School Year Division
Wautoma 1949 Class C
Westfield 1952 Class C
Westfield 1955 Class C
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List of conference champions

Boys Basketball

More information School, Quantity ...
School Quantity Years
Wautoma 9 1929, 1930, 1931, 1949, 1950, 1957, 1959, 1960, 1961
Westfield 9 1933, 1934, 1936, 1938, 1939, 1944, 1952, 1954, 1958
Adams-Friendship 7 1940, 1941, 1942, 1946, 1947, 1955, 1962
Port Edwards 6 1935, 1937, 1944, 1947, 1948, 1951
Omro 5 1938, 1939, 1946, 1953, 1956
Coloma 4 1934, 1935, 1938, 1946
Oxford 4 1941, 1947, 1948, 1949
Montello 3 1932, 1937, 1945
Plainfield 3 1927, 1936, 1937
Hancock 2 1939, 1946
Markesan 2 1940, 1945
Tri-County 2 1953, 1959
Wild Rose 2 1942, 1951
Almond 1 1950
Endeavor 1 1946
Neshkoro 1 1940
Winneconne 1 1933
Friendship 0
Green Lake 0
Princeton 0
Redgranite 0
Champions from 1928, 1941 (Eastern) and 1942 (Northern) unknown
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Football

More information School, Quantity ...
School Quantity Years
Wautoma 5 1947, 1953, 1955, 1959, 1960
Adams-Friendship 4 1945, 1946, 1958, 1961
Omro 3 1945, 1948, 1949
Westfield 3 1950, 1951, 1954
Tri-County 2 1956, 1957
Port Edwards 1 1952
Montello 0
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References

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