Eastern Wisconsin Conference

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The Eastern Wisconsin Conference is a high school athletic conference with its membership based in east central Wisconsin. It existed in two incarnations: the original conference from 1923 to 1970 and the current one since 1979. The conference and its member schools belong to the Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association.

1923–1930

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30km
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Sheboygan Falls
Plymouth
New Holstein
Kiel
Hilbert
Elkhart Lake
Chilton
Brillion
Location of Original Eastern Wisconsin Conference Members (1923)

The Eastern Wisconsin Conference, originally known as the Big Eight High School Athletic Conference, was founded in 1923 by eight small high schools in the area between Lake Michigan and Lake Winnebago in east central Wisconsin (Brillion, Chilton, Elkhart Lake, Hilbert, Kiel, New Holstein, Plymouth and Sheboygan Falls).[1] Original member schools were located in three counties: Calumet, Manitowoc and Sheboygan. After the conference's first season of competition, three schools (Brillion, Elkhart Lake and Hilbert) were dropped from the membership roster.[2] Elkhart Lake rejoined the conference in 1925 to bring membership back up to six schools.[3] A seventh member school was added when Valders joined the Big Eight in 1928,[4] and Kohler brought the ledger back to eight members when they entered the league in 1929.[5]

1930–1948

In 1930, three football-playing members of the Big Eight (Chilton, Plymouth and Sheboygan Falls) began to discuss the formation of a football conference.[6] The Eastern Wisconsin Conference adopted its official moniker in 1935,[7] and started eleven-man football competition the next year with Chilton, Kiel, Plymouth and Sheboygan Falls. A division for six-man football was formed in 1938,[8] and its original members were New Holstein, Sheboygan Falls and Valders. Kohler joined in 1941 when they started their six-man football program,[9] which is the same year that the eleven-man division stopped keeping records. In 1948, the decision was made by six of the eight conference members to transition to eleven-man football with six members (Chilton, Kiel, New Holstein, Plymouth, Sheboygan Falls and Valders) participating. Elkhart Lake and Kohler elected to continue as six-man programs and did not remain as football members.[10]

1948–1970

After the initial membership shuffle, the Eastern Wisconsin Conference maintained a steady membership roster for over two decades for most of their sports. Original conference member Brillion rejoined the EWC in 1951 after moving over from the Little Nine Conference.[11] The Eastern Wisconsin Conference increased to ten members in 1960, adding Oostburg to its membership roster. In 1965, Brillion rejoined the Little Nine Conference,[12] with their place being taken by former Kettle Moraine Conference members Cedar Grove.[13] In football, Kohler and Elkhart Lake-Glenbeulah joined the EWC after moving to eleven-man football in 1960[14] and 1964,[15] respectively. Five schools left the conference in 1969; four became charter members of the Central Lakeshore Conference (Cedar Grove, Elkhart Lake-Glenbeulah, Kohler and Oostburg)[16] and Chilton competed as an independent after completion of the 1969 football season.[17] The EWC disbanded at the end of the 1969-1970 school year, with members dispersed to two new conferences. Five schools joined the Packerland Conference (Chilton, Kiel, New Holstein, Plymouth and Sheboygan Falls)[17] and Valders accepted membership in the Olympian Conference.[18]

1979-present

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Valders
Two Rivers
Sheboygan Falls
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Chilton
Location of Original Eastern Wisconsin Conference Members (1979)

The Eastern Wisconsin Conference was reformed in 1979 by six of the previous members (Chilton, Kiel, New Holstein, Plymouth, Sheboygan Falls and Valders) along with newcomers Two Rivers.[19] The six previous members all left the conferences that were previously joined in 1970, and Two Rivers came over from the Fox Valley Association. Valders only stayed in the new EWC for one season, rejoining the Olympian Conference in 1980.[20] Kewaskum joined the Eastern Wisconsin Conference as their replacement after being left without conference affiliation following the dissolution of the Scenic Moraine Conference.[21][22] This alignment stayed intact for nearly two decades, until in 1999, Chilton left to become members of the Olympian Conference.[23] Campbellsport moved over from the Flyway Conference and Roncalli joined from the Fox Valley Christian Conference as their replacements.[24] Roncalli's entry into the league coincided with the merger between the WIAA and the Wisconsin Independent Schools Athletic Association,[25] and they became the first private school affiliated with the EWC. Roncalli's affiliation would last until 2007, when they accepted membership in the Olympian Conference[26] and Waupun joined from the East Central Flyway Conference to keep the roster at eight schools.[27] The most recent change to conference membership came in 2015, when the Eastern Wisconsin Conference lost four members (Campbellsport, Kewaskum, Plymouth and Waupun) to the revival of the East Central Conference.[28] They were replaced by four schools displaced by the ceasing of the Olympian Conference. Chilton, Roncalli and Valders made their return to the EWC, along with Brillion, who were members of the original conference from 1951 to 1965.

Football-only alignment

In February 2019, in conjunction with the Wisconsin Football Coaches Association, the WIAA released a sweeping football-only realignment for Wisconsin to commence with the 2020 football season and run on a two-year cycle.[29] Seven members of the Eatsern Wisconsin Conference were carried over into the football conference (Brillion, Chilton, Kiel, New Holstein, Roncalli, Two Rivers and Valders) and the Kohler/Sheboygan Lutheran/Sheboygan Christian (KLC) football cooperative was brought over from the Big East Conference.[30] This alignment remained in place for the 2022-2023 realignment cycle.[31] For the 2024-2025 cycle, Two Rivers was realigned to the North Eastern Conference for football, and St. Mary Catholic in Neenah took their place after moving from the Trailways Conference.[32] The Eastern Wisconsin Conference will swamp members with the North Eastern Conference for the 2026-2027 cycle, with Two Rivers making their return and the KLC football cooperative taking their place in the NEC.[33]

List of conference members (1979-present)

Conference membership history (1923–1970)

Final members

School Location Affiliation Mascot Colors Joined Left Conference Joined Current Conference
Kiel Kiel, WI Public Raiders     1923[1] 1970[17] Packerland Eastern Wisconsin
New Holstein New Holstein, WI Public Huskies     1923[1] 1970[17] Packerland Eastern Wisconsin
Plymouth Plymouth, WI Public Panthers     1923[1] 1970[17] Packerland Glacier Trails
Sheboygan Falls Sheboygan Falls, WI Public Falcons     1923[1] 1970[17] Packerland Eastern Wisconsin
Valders Valders, WI Public Vikings     1928[4] 1970[18] Olympian Eastern Wisconsin

Previous members

School Location Affiliation Mascot Colors Joined Left Conference Joined Current Conference
Brillion Brillion, WI Public Lions     1923,[1] 1951[11] 1924,[2] 1965[12] Independent, Little Nine Eastern Wisconsin
Cedar Grove Cedar Grove, WI Public Rockets     1965[13] 1969[17] Central Lakeshore Big East
Chilton Chilton, WI Public Tigers     1923[1] 1969[17] Independent Eastern Wisconsin
Elkhart Lake-Glenbeulah Elkhart Lake, WI Public Resorters     1923,[1] 1925[3] 1924,[2] 1969[16] Independent, Central Lakeshore Big East
Hilbert Hilbert, WI Public Wolves     1923[1] 1924[2] Independent Big East
Kohler Kohler WI Public Blue Bombers     1929[5] 1969[17] Central Lakeshore Big East
Oostburg Oostburg, WI Public Dutchmen     1960[42] 1969[16] Central Lakeshore Big East

Football-only members

School Location Affiliation Mascot Colors Seasons Primary Conference
Chilton Chilton, WI Public Tigers     1969[17] Independent

Membership timeline

1923-1970

Full members

Football members

 11-Man Division  6-Man Division

1979-present

Full members

Football members

Membership map

Eastern Wisconsin Conference
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Maps: terms of use
13km
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8
8 Valders
8 Valders
7
7 Two Rivers
7 Two Rivers
6
6 Sheboygan Falls
6 Sheboygan Falls
5
5 Roncalli
5 Roncalli
4
4 New Holstein
4 New Holstein
3
3 Kiel
3 Kiel
2
2 Chilton
2 Chilton
1
1 Brillion
1 Brillion
Location of Eastern Wisconsin Conference full members:

Sanctioned sports

List of state champions

Fall sports

Boys Cross Country
School Year Division
Two Rivers 1999 Division 2
Valders 2017 Division 2
Valders 2018 Division 2
Valders 2019 Division 2
Valders 2021 Division 2
Girls Cross Country
School Year Division
Chilton 1996 Division 2
Football
School Year Division
Two Rivers 1980 Division 3
Two Rivers 1981 Division 3
Two Rivers 1982 Division 3
Sheboygan Falls 2000 Division 3
Boys Soccer
School Year Division
Plymouth 2002 Division 2
Roncalli/
Two Rivers
2020 Division 2
Girls Volleyball
School Year Division
Sheboygan Falls 1983 Class B
Waupun 2008 Division 2

Winter sports

Boys Basketball
School Year Division
Chilton 1986 Class B
Roncalli 2018 Division 4
Roncalli 2022 Division 4
Brillion 2023 Division 3
Girls Basketball
School Year Division
Chilton 1992 Division 3
Boys Wrestling
School Year Division
Valders 1957 Single Division

Spring sports

Boys Golf
School Year Division
Roncalli 2009 Division 3
Girls Soccer
School Year Division
New Holstein 2010 Division 3
Kiel 2023 Division 4
Boys Tennis
School Year Division
Roncalli 2000[43] WISAA
Boys Track & Field
School Year Division
Kohler 1946 Class C
Kohler 1947 Class C
Kohler 1948 Class C
Kohler 1950 Class C
Kohler 1951 Class C
Kohler 1953 Class C
New Holstein 1955 Class C
New Holstein 1956 Class C
Kohler 1958 Class C
Kohler 1965 Class C
Kohler 1967 Class C
Plymouth 1967 Class B
Kohler 1968 Class C
Girls Track & Field
School Year Division
Two Rivers 1994 Division 2
Two Rivers 2000 Division 2
Two Rivers 2003 Division 2

Summer sports

Baseball
School Year Division
New Holstein 1965 Single Division
Plymouth 1982 Single Division

List of conference champions

References

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