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Harrisonburg High School (HHS), part of the Harrisonburg City School System, is a public high school located in Harrisonburg, Virginia, United States. HHS serves grades nine through twelve, and its athletic teams are known as the Blue Streaks. In October 2017, 1782 students were enrolled. [2]
Harrisonburg High School: Harrisonburg: Blue Streaks 1,758 Rockbridge County High School: Lexington: Wildcats 976 Spotswood High School: Penn Laird: Trailblazers 967 Turner Ashby High School: Bridgewater: Knights 1,082 William Monroe High School: Stanardsville: Green Dragons 957
Bridgeforth Stadium is a football stadium located on the campus of James Madison University in Harrisonburg, Virginia. The stadium is home to the James Madison Dukes football team. The playing surface is named Zane Showker Field. With a seating capacity of 24,877, Bridgeforth Stadium is currently the 12th largest stadium in the Sun Belt Conference.
The senior was everywhere for Lake, sparking the Blue Streaks as they outlasted visiting Perry 35-14 in this Division II, Region 7 playoff opener on Friday.. No. 4 seed Lake (8-3) advances to host ...
Oct. 7—JEFFERSON — The Madison Blue Streaks dynamic offense puts on a show against the Jefferson Falcons on Friday night during a Chagrin Valley Conference Lake Division contest at Jefferson.
Harrisonburg was named for Thomas Harrison (1704–1785), an early settler. [20]The earliest documented English exploration of the area prior to settlement was the Knights of the Golden Horseshoe Expedition, led by Lt. Gov. Alexander Spotswood, who reached Elkton, and whose rangers continued and in 1716 likely passed through what is now Harrisonburg.
The evidence was clear after the Blue Streaks overcame some first-half miscues to soundly defeat North, 27-13, at Nick Carter Stadium Friday night. It was the second consecutive win for Madison (2 ...
Previously, the game was a divisional game in the CAA South, and conference game in the Yankee Conference and Atlantic 10 beginning with the Dukes entry in 1993. During this period, the teams have combined for two national championships (JMU in 2004 and 2016) and eleven conference championships (JMU in 1999, 2004, 2008, 2015, 2016, 2017; W&M in 1996, 2001, 2004, 2010, 2015).