Rolling Hills Conference (Iowa) Explained

The Rolling Hills Conference was a small-school high school athletic conference in west central Iowa. All of the schools in the conference competed in Class 1A, the smallest in the state.

Final members

InstitutionLocationMascotColorsAffiliationCurrent Conference
Adair–CaseyAdairBombersPublicCombined with Guthrie Center, competes in the West Central Activities Conference as A-C/GC.
Ankeny Christian AcademyAnkenyEaglesPrivateBluegrass Conference
CAMAnitaCougarsPublicRolling Valley Conference
East GreeneGrand JunctionHawksPublicCombined with Jefferson–Scranton, competes in the Heart of Iowa Conference as Greene County.
Exira/EH-KElk HornSpartansPublicRolling Valley Conference
Glidden-RalstonGliddenWildcatsPublicRolling Valley Conference
Grandview Park BaptistDes MoinesDefendersPrivateClosed in 2014; Grand View Christian School opened in 2014 and competes in the Bluegrass Conference.
Iowa Christian AcademyWest Des MoinesTrailblazersPrivateClosed in 2018
Paton-ChurdanChurdanRocketsPublicRolling Valley Conference
Orient-MacksburgOrientBulldogsPublicBluegrass Conference
WalnutWalnutWarriorsPublicConsolidated with A-H-S-T to form AHSTW, competes in Western Iowa Conference

History

The Rolling Hills Conference was organized in the late 1970s.[1] Original members were Walnut, Elk Horn–Kimballton, Anita, Cumberland-Massena, Bridgewater–Fontanelle, Adair–Casey, Orient-Macksburg, and Exira. They were soon joined by Shelby-Tennant and Carson-Macedonia. Carson-Macedonia left for the Corner Conference in 1986. Anita and Cumberland-Massena merged to become CAM in 1989. Shelby-Tennant left when they merged with AvoHa of Avoca in 1991. Bridgewater–Fontanelle did likewise when they merged with Greenfield in 1993. In 2004, Earlham, who had joined the conference in the late 1990s, left the league to join the West Central Activities Conference, a league covering similar territory that contains larger 1A and smaller 2A schools. Ankeny Christian Academy joined the conference in 2005. The school had only recently started its athletic program and the Rolling Hills was its first conference. In 2007, Paton-Churdan, the smallest school in the West Central Activities Conference, became a member of the Rolling Hills, and in 2009 Glidden-Ralston followed them there. In 2010, East Greene became the third West Central Activities Conference school to jump to the Rolling Hills in the last 4 years, with both Exira and Elk Horn Kimballton sharing in sports at the starts in 2010.

The conference was dissolved after the 2012–13 school year.

References

  1. Web site: Larry . Peterson. Orient-Macksburg scrambles to find a new conference home. Creston News Advertiser. May 6, 2014. June 28, 2012.

External links