Mill River Union High School

Coordinates: 43°32′49″N 72°58′17″W / 43.5470°N 72.9715°W / 43.5470; -72.9715
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mill River Union High School
Address
Map
2321 Middle Road

,
05759
Coordinates43°32′49″N 72°58′17″W / 43.5470°N 72.9715°W / 43.5470; -72.9715
Information
School typePublic, high school middle school
Founded1975
School boardMill River Unified Union School District
School districtMill River Unified Union School District
PrincipalKaelyne Thompson
Faculty32.67 FTEs[1]
Grades7–12
Enrollment445 (2017-18)[1]
Student to teacher ratio13.62[1]
LanguageEnglish
CampusRural
Color(s)Minuteman red, white, & blue    
MascotMinuteman
Websitehttp://millriverschools.org/mru/

Mill River Union High School, commonly known as Mill River or MRU is a public junior-senior high school in Clarendon, Vermont, in the United States. It is part of the Mill River Unified Union School District. MRUUSD includes the towns of Clarendon, Wallingford, Shrewsbury and Tinmouth. Other towns whose students attend Mill River include Ira, Ludlow, Middletown Springs and Danby. The current principal is Kaelyne Thompson.[2] The current superintendent of the district is Brian Hill.

Recognition[edit]

The 2017 U.S. News & World Report ranked Mill River Union High School as one of the top 10 schools in Vermont. The ranking gave MRU a silver medal– which was awarded to only 10.3% of high schools nationally.

Athletics[edit]

Mill River competes in Division III in Vermont in all sports. It competes in the local Marble Valley League (MVL).

  • The Girls Soccer Team was ranked #1 in the state in 2004 and 2005.[citation needed]
  • The Football Team won the state championship in 1994[citation needed]
  • The Girls Basketball Team won the state championship in 2015 for the first and only time in school history. 2015 was the first of three state championship games in a row the girls would appear in, coming up short in the 2016 and 2017. They have been to the Final Four 10 times, with a 6-4 record. They have a 1-5 record in the championship game, with their last appearance coming in 2017.
  • The Boys Basketball team won the state championship in 1982 and 1989. They have been to the Final Four 11 times, with a 5-6 record. They have a 2-3 record in the championship game, with their last appearance coming in 2005, when they lost 44-45 to Montpelier. Mill River has a 41-41 record in the playoffs.
  • In their first year in Division III for soccer, the 7th seeded Minutemen upset 2 schools on their way to the first state championship appearance for soccer in 13 years. They lost 4-3 to Green Mountain in 2019.[citation needed]
  • In 2014, the Baseball Team won the state championship for the first and only time in school history. [citation needed]
  • The Cheerleading Team has won 5 straight D2 state championships, dating back to 2017.

Drama[edit]

Mill River's theater company is Stage 40, led by director Peter Bruno and a student board of directors. Each season it performs three shows, and helps the middle school (Stage 20) run a spring play. The 2007-2008 season included The Pirates of Penzance by Gilbert & Sullivan. The fall show was an adaptation of Roald Dahl's The Twits, a knock off of the famous, James Besaw's The Tits. The 2009-2010 season included Splendor in the Grass, by William Inge, based on the film of the same name, directed by Elia Kazan; Discourse on Dissent, a series of shorts based on war themes; and The Witches. The Middle school did a performance of Alice in Wonderland. Other productions have included, Sam Shepard's Geography of a Horse Dreamer, Slavomir Mrozek's, Fox Hunt, and Ted Hughes', The Pig Organ.

Music[edit]

Mill River Union High School's Music program is run by Kristin Cimonetti, Peter Roach, and Andrew Loose. Kristin conducts a senior choir of over seventy students. Kristin also conducts three honors ensembles; the Chamber singers (bass and treble voices), the Clef Hangers (bass voices), and the Tempo Tantrums (treble voices). Andrew conducts a junior choir of over forty students, three honors ensembles; Jazz Combo, Cantiamo (bass unchanged), and Vivace (treble unchanged), and a collegiate music theory class. Peter teaches senior and junior band, as well as two honors ensembles; Jazz Band and Jazz Lab. Many students who participate in the music program are accepted into the New England festival, All-State festival and District five music festivals annually.[3]

Visual Arts[edit]

Mill River's Visual Art department is led by Karen Swyler & Jonathan Taylor and includes comprehensive programs in Drawing, Pottery, Photography (darkroom and digital), and AP (Advanced Placement) Studio Art. Art facilities consist of two classrooms with separate pottery, painting/photo, and darkroom studios. Students have 1:1 access to college-level facilities from pottery studio & wheels, state-of-the-art MacBook Pro laptops, Adobe Creative Cloud, loaner DSLRs, 35mm & medium format film cameras, painting studio and photo darkroom. All art courses offer personalized, differentiated pathways supporting advanced work to level 3 & 4 classes, often culminating in AP Studio Art portfolios in drawing, painting, photography, new media, and 3D sculpture. Student work is exhibited every year at Fall, Winter, & Spring school shows as well as at the Castleton University Arts Engagement Festival and the Chaffee Art Center's Annual Student Art Exhibit. Trips to National Portfolio Day, Middlebury College Art Museum, Vermont Folklife Center, The Clark, Mass MOCA, and New York City are coordinated with the Stafford Technical Center. Jonathan Taylor's students have scored well on the AP Studio portfolio and been admitted to top college programs and art schools across the country.

Activities[edit]

  • Upward Bound (Castleton State College)

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c "Mill River Union High School". National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved March 27, 2020.
  2. ^ "retrieved from About Us on August 30, 2022". Retrieved 2022-08-30.
  3. ^ "Performing Arts Calendar | Mill River Union High School". Archived from the original on 2017-02-15. Retrieved 2017-02-15.

External links[edit]