In 1905, the first high school was built in Scotia, with the first class graduating nine students in 1910. In the same year of the first high school graduation, the district built the Mohawk School, named after the easternmost Iroquois tribe. The building still stands on Ten Broeck Street, however today it is a center for early childhood education. Following World War II, during the governorship of Thomas E. Dewey, a series of new construction projects began in the district to meet the growing needs of educating children during the mid-twentieth century baby boom. The building which houses the current Scotia-Glenville Senior High School first opened for classes in 1959. In March 1999, the community approved a multi-million dollar construction project that added a new high school gym, science classroom wing and music area to the senior high school. Scotia-Glenville Junior High School became Scotia-Glenville Middle School in 2001. Today, Scotia-Glenville High School has a total enrollment of 782 students across 4 grades, and an 89% graduation rate. Scotia-Glenville High School has a total enrollment of 782 students across 4 grades, and an 89% graduation rate. In 2013, Scotia-Glenville became the first school district in Schenectady County to install to solar panels on its buildings and bus garage for energy, saving an estimated $1 million in energy costs over the next two decades.
Origin of the "Tartan" as the School's Mascot
The mascot of Scotia-Glenville High School is the "Tartan", depicted as a bagpiper from the Scottish Highlands wearing a traditional tartan outfit. This is because Alexander Lindsay Glen, a native of Fife, Scotland, was one of the first European settlers in the area. The name "Tartans" refers to Glen's Scottish heritage by referencing a traditional textile pattern from Scotland. Additionally, Glen named his estate "Nova Scotia," the Latin translation of "New Scotland," in memory of the land of his birth. The Town of Glenville is similarly named after Alexander Lindsay Glen. The Scotia-Glenville area of Upstate New York has been populated at various times by the Mohawk people, Dutch colonists in New Netherland, colonists of the British Empire, and finally was integrated into the State of New York after the American Revolution. Glen, also known as "Sanders," a shortened version of "Alexander," had acquired the present-day area in the Scotia-Glenville school district from the Dutch in the 1650s. In 1661, Glenville became the site of the first continuous European settlement in the Mohawk Valley, and was part of some of the last great struggles between the Mohawk and Mohegan peoples for control of the Mohawk Valley. Glen, as one of the early settlers this part of the Dutch colony of New Netherland, housed victims of the 1690 Schenectady Massacre. In reference to this legacy, Scotia-Glenville High School holds its junior-senior prom at the historic Glen Sanders Mansion, a 1713 farmstead built by Alexander Lindsay Glen's son, located in the village of Scotia, New York.
Athletics
Scotia-Glenville's varsity boy's basketball program won consecutive state championships as part of the New York State Public High School Athletic Association for the years 2014 and 2015, and was the Federation Tournament champion in 2015. Scotia-Glenville was the first Section II boys' basketball team to ever repeat as champions. The Tartans boys basketball program competes at the Class A level. Other than its championship-winning boys basketball program, Scotia-Glenville offers a full array of interscholastic sports from modified to varsity levels. In most sports, its athletic teams compete as members of the Foothills Council of Section II.
Boys Basketball Sectional titles (Section II, Class A)
Scotia-Glenville's Alma Mater, played during Commencement ceremonies and sports events, references the Scottish heritage of Alexander Lindsay Glen. The alma mater also refers to as well as the fighting spirit of Scotia's prominent athletic programs: