place

Johnsburg High School

Public high schools in IllinoisSchools in McHenry County, Illinois

Johnsburg High School is a public secondary school in Johnsburg, Illinois; it serves grades 9–12 for the Johnsburg Community Unit School District #12. The school opened in 1978 and has an enrollment of approximately 600 students.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Johnsburg High School (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

Johnsburg High School
West Ringwood Road,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Phone number Website External links Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Johnsburg High SchoolContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 42.40334 ° E -88.2344 °
placeShow on map

Address

Johnsburg High School

West Ringwood Road 2002
60051
Illinois, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

Phone number
Johnsburg Community Unit School District 12

call+18153859233

Website
jhs.johnsburg12.org

linkVisit website

linkWikiData (Q6268086)
linkOpenStreetMap (429203790)

Share experience

Nearby Places

Burton Township, McHenry County, Illinois
Burton Township, McHenry County, Illinois

Burton Township is the smallest of 17 townships in McHenry County, Illinois. As of the 2020 census, its population was 4,820 and it contained 1,858 housing units. Burton Township was first settled by Englishmen in 1836 who gave it the name English Prairie. Later settlers called the township Benton, but after learning that there already was a post office and township of Benton in southern Illinois, the name was changed to Burton on December 28, 1850. Burton Township is unusually small because its first residents broke from Richmond Township to its west. The reason for this was a "Hatfields vs. McCoys" type of feud in the 1840s over alleged township mismanagement and higher taxes in Richmond. The Burton settlers opted out and even tried to have adjoining Lake County absorb them into its eastern neighbor, Antioch Township, but Antioch Township had just consolidated Cooper Township into itself, and since Burton Township was situated in another county, a special law needed to be passed in Springfield to affect that change. [Curiously, Abraham Lincoln successfully represented the disgruntled residents of what would become Niantic Township Niantic Township, Macon County, Illinois to join downstate Macon County to escape the higher taxation of Shelby and Sangamon Counties in the late 1830s. Lincoln's fee was set at 7 and 1/2 percent of each landholder's tax saving for the first three years .... a fee gratefully paid by nearly all of the township's 'secessionists.' This episode was used by various Southern orators and newspapers, and their Northern sympathizers, to show Lincoln's inconsistency and hypocrisy in demanding that the Southern States could not secede from the Union after Fort Sumter, when he himself had argued that the Niantic settlers could "pick up and leave the rottenness of Shelby and Sangamon Counties as they saw fit, a God-given right of self-determination." ]