Mt. Blue High School | |
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Address | |
129 Seamon Road Farmington, Maine 04938 United States |
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Coordinates | 44°38′18″N 70°07′56″W / 44.6382°N 70.1321°WCoordinates: 44°38′18″N 70°07′56″W / 44.6382°N 70.1321°W |
Information | |
School type | State High School |
Motto | Be here, be safe, be respectful, be responsible |
School district | Mt. Blue Regional School District |
Superintendent | Tom Ward, D. Ed. |
Principal | Bruce Mochamer |
Grades | 9–12 |
Enrollment | 820 |
Language | English |
Hours in school day | 7:45 A.M to 1:50 P.M. |
Color(s) | Blue and gold |
Athletics | football, soccer, field hockey, golf, cross country, basketball, cheering, wrestling, skiing, track and field, softball, baseball, lacrosse. |
Athletics conference | Northern Maine class A |
Mascot | Cougar |
Team name | Mt. Blue Cougars |
Rival | Skowhegan High School, Messalonskee High School |
Publication | School Newspaper |
Yearbook | Timaron |
Tuition | Taxes |
Website | http://www.mtbluersd.org/ www.mtbluersd.org/ |
Mt. Blue High School is a public high school (grades 9–12) in Farmington, Maine, United States. The school is a part of the Mt. Blue Regional School District, and enrolls students from the Maine towns of Farmington, Weld, Temple, Wilton, Chesterville, New Vineyard, Industry, New Sharon, Starks,and Vienna. The school's athletic mascot is the cougar.
Electives available to students include classes in personal finance, advertising, foreign languages, creative writing, Shakespeare and drama, and a variety of Advanced placement courses.
In 2009 Mt. Blue changed from MSAD to Mt. Blue Regional School District (RSD), to start the new changes to the School. The state of Maine issued the school 63,568,833 dollars for the new school. The school will be completely redone and is planned to be finished around 2013. The new school will cover 226,000 square feet, 35.8% bigger than the old school. The school will be three stories tall, and will be the largest school in Franklin County.
Mt. Blue High School is known as a statewide powerhouse in both Alpine and Nordic disciplines. The women's team holds the state record for the most consecutive state championships in any sport. They train at Titcomb Mountain in Farmington.