Sheridan School District (Oregon)
The Sheridan School District 48J is a unified school district that serves the Sheridan area in the U.S. state of Oregon. The district has four schools and 1,042 students. District offices are in Sheridan on Bridge Street at the high school. Dorie Vickery is the district superintendent, with oversight by the five-member school board. The district is part of the Willamette Education Service District.
History
By 1871 a public school had been built in Sheridan. In 1894, the school had an enrollment of about 100 students, with a single principal and two assistants. The single school district's building was worth $10,000 in 1908, and at that time the school employed six teachers, but grew to ten teachers two years later. By 1913 the school held classes through twelfth grade and included a manual labor training department.Two school board members faced recall in 1985 after local church leaders objected to the unmarried couple living together, with one not yet divorced from his wife prior to moving in with the female board member. The Sheridan district considered merging with the neighboring Willamina School District in 1993. Willamina approved the merger, but voters in Sheridan voted down the proposal 417 to 411.
The district built a new brick school in 1935. In 1998, this school, the K-3 Faulconer Elementary School, burned down and was temporarily replaced by modular housing. Voters in the school district approved an $8.5 million bond in 2003 to build a replacement school that would also combine the 4-8 grade Chapman Elementary School into a K-8 school. Faulconer-Chapman School opened in September 2004. The old Chapman school building was burned down in a fire training exercise in May 2005. In 2005, the school's average enrollment was 965, an increase from 954 students in the district in October 2001.