Rubyville Elementary School | |
---|---|
"The District that Encourages the Child to Discover"
|
|
Location | |
3019 Maple Benner Road Portsmouth, OhioUnited States |
|
Information | |
Type | (Ohio) public, rural, elementary school |
Motto | "Cognitiones Artes Habitus Virtutes" |
Established | 1940 |
Principal | Tony Piguet, Elementary Principal |
Head of school | Anthony Mantell, Superintendent (Clay Local School District) |
Faculty | 9 |
Grades | 4-6 |
Number of students | 140 (as of 2006[update]) |
Color(s) | Royal Blue and gold |
Mascot | Panthers |
Information | 740-353-0272 |
Website | Clay Local School District |
3019 Maple Benner Road
Rubyville Elementary School is one of two elementary schools in the Clay Local School District in the far southern region of the U.S. state of Ohio. Rubyville Elementary (a.k.a. Rubyville) serves students in grades four through six. The building is located on Maple Benner Road at the intersection of State Route 139 in Scioto County's Wayne Township. The other elementary building in the district is Rosemount Primary School (K-3) located on Rose Valley Road in Rosemount.
The Clay Local School District (CLSD) was created in 1940 to serve the residents of Clay Township and the individual communities of Eden Park, Rosemount, Rubyville, and Twin Valley. For those students who desired to go on to high school before the opening of the high school in 1940, the board of education provided their tuition to Glenwood High School or to Portsmouth High School. "There were buses to transport students to and from school, but there was no cafeteria, therefore, students brought their lunches." The first graduating class in 1940 was nicknamed the "Dirty Dozen" because there were twelve students that walked across the stage for the first time as Clay graduates.
The district began with four buildings—one high school and three elementary schools. There were two buildings in Rubyville—the current elementary building, which served as the high school from 1940–1956, and an elementary building (originally Sumers, later renamed Long Run School), which is now a local church. The district also had an elementary building in Eden Park, which still stands but is no longer used by the district, and one in Rosemount (Scioto Trail School), which was located on the current site of JW Village Market.
In 1956, the Rubyville building (built in 1939) became the elementary building. With a bond issue to raise $325,000 (along with matching funds for a total cost of nearly $600,000) a new high school building, which opened its doors on February 1, 1956, was built on Clay High Street. Mr. Carl Bandy was the Executive Head of the Clay (Rural) Local School District when the high school was built in 1955. At that time, the enrollment of the district was 719. One year later, it was 915. During the period of peak employment at the Atomic Plant in Piketon (now U.S.E.C.), the enrollment was 1100. A new elementary building was then built in Rosemount (Rosemount Primary, built in 1964).