Ohio East/Southeast Regions defunct athletic conferences

This is a list of former high school athletic conferences in the East and Southeast Regions of Ohio, as designated by the OHSAA. If a conference had members that span multiple regions, the conference is placed in the article of the region most of its former members hail from. Because the names of localities and their corresponding high schools do not always match and because there is often a possibility of ambiguity with respect to either the name of a locality or the name of a high school, the following table gives both in every case, with the locality name first, in plain type, and the high school name second in boldface type. The school's team nickname is given last.

Adams County League

The ACL was one of the local small-school county leagues in Southwest Ohio. Consolidation reduced the number of teams to five by 1964, and in 1970 these five joined with the Brown and Highland county leagues to form the Southern Hills Athletic League.

  1. Manchester and Peebles played concurrently in the ACL and Tri-County League 1964-70.

Athens County League

  1. Concurrent with Frontier Valley Conference 1965-66, MOVC 1966-69.

Cardinal Conference

Further information: Cardinal Conference (OHSAA)

Note: The Ohio Cardinal Conference was created in 2003 to preserve the legacy of the former Cardinal Conference.

Carroll County League

One of the smallest county conferences, the CCL lasted until two of its members consolidated in 1962, while the other two schools had been playing in other leagues concurrently with the CCL.

  1. Concurrent with TVAC 1960-62.
  2. Mailing address is Bowerston, in Harrison County, physical location is in Sherrodsville.
  3. Concurrent with HCL 1956-60, concurrent in HCL and TVAC 1960-62.

Coshocton County League

  1. Concurrent with Scenic Hills Athletic Conference 1964-65.

Fairfield County League

This league had many members concurrently with the Mid-State League, and ended when Pickerington, the last remaining non-MSL member, joined the MSL in 1966.

  1. concurrent in FCL and MSL 1949-66.
  2. concurrent in FCL and MSL 1953-66.
  3. concurrent in FCL and MSL 1957-66.
  4. concurrent in FCL and MSL 1958-66.

Harrison County League

  1. Concurrent with OVAC 1956-74.
  2. Concurrent with Carroll County League 1956-62, and Tuscarawas Valley Athletic Conference 1960-68.

Highland County League

The HCL was one of the local small-school county leagues in Southwest Ohio. The league had eight schools for most of its history, but consolidation chipped away at its membership total. League membership had been reduced to three by 1969,and these teams struggled on for a year until the creation of the Southern Hills Athletic League, which saw the three combine with the Adams and Brown county leagues, who had five teams apiece at that point.

Hocking County League

This was one of the few county leagues while still having enough members for competition, as the four schools left for different leagues.

Jackson County League

  1. Concurrent with SEOAL 1925-54.

Lawrence County League

  1. Concurrent with OVC 1954-57.

Meigs County League

  1. Concurrent with SVAC 1961-67.

Monroe County League

  1. Concurrent with OVAC 1958-64.

Ohio-Kentucky Athletic Conference

Pickaway County League

Another of the old County leagues for smaller schools, the league suffered from the rapid consolidation of schools in Pickaway County in the early 1960s. The league went from eleven schools in 1959 to four in 1963, with those four consolidating that next year.

River Valley Conference

This was a short-lived conference in the 1990s to help some Ohio Valley Athletic Conference teams with scheduling.

Scenic Hills Conference

A short-lived "bridge" conference for newly consolidated and larger schools until the Inter-Valley Conference was formed.

  1. Concurrent with Tuscarawas County League 1964-65, Tuscarawas Valley Athletic Conference 1965-68.
  2. Concurrent with Coshocton County League 1964-65.


Southeastern Ohio Athletic League

The SEOAL is Ohio's oldest non-city athletic league, founded in 1925. The 2016-2017 school year is the final year the SEOAL will exist as a conference. No all-sports trophy will be awarded due to only having three members in the final year.

Former Members:

From 2006-10, the SEOAL played in North and South divisions:

Southern Valley Athletic Conference

Originally the Gallia County League, the conference changed its name to the SVAC in 1958 with an eye on expanding the league to protect against future consolidations. The conference fell apart in 1992, as it was reduced to three schools, and limped along until those three found conference homes that next year.

  1. Concurrent with Meigs County League 1961-67.

Tri-County League (Southeast)

This league started in 1964 with the dissolution of the Pike County League. The two schools not already in other conferences joined with schools from neighboring Adams and Scioto counties that wanted a secondary conference to fill their schedules. These schools largely ended up in the Southern Hills Athletic Conference or the Southern Ohio Conference by the time the league wound up in 1985.

  1. Played concurrently in TCL and Scioto County League 1964-79, and TCL and SOC 1979-85.
  2. Played concurrently in TCL and SOC 1981-85.
  3. Played concurrently in TCL and Adams County League 1964-70.
  4. Played concurrently in the TCL and SHAC 1971-84.

Tri-State Athletic Conference

Tuscarawas County League

  1. Concurrent with TVAC 1960-68.
  2. Concurrent with SHC 1964-65.

Tuscarawas Valley Athletic Conference

Formed as some of the Tuscarawas County schools proved to be too large to face sufficient competition in the county league, these schools banded together with other larger schools in the area. The league ended in 1968, as the largest schools joined the dwindling Stark County AA League schools to form the Senate League, and most of the other schools helped found the Inter-Valley Conference.

  1. Concurrent with Carroll County League 1960-62.
  2. Concurrent with HCL 1960-68.
  3. Concurrent with Tuscarawas County League 1960-68.
  4. Concurrent with Coshocton County League 1960-64.
  5. Concurrent with Scenic Hills Conference throughout TVAC membership.

See also

Notes and references

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