Yes, it’s weird. But would knowing that it commemorates a disaster that took the lives of 14 people help make it any less so?
I thought not. Sure enough, the mascot was named after the crash of the airship USS Shenandoah nearby in 1925.
The Shenandoah was the first airship that the US created, being commissioned in 1923. It was also the first airship to use helium (instead of the much more flammable hydrogen). Apart from its service with the Navy, it also undertook a memorable flight across the country (the first, for a dirigible).
As for the accident, the ship was caught in an updraft that took it to a height where the gas bags burst. With that, the control cars and engines became detached and fell to the ground. It’s kinda amazing that 28 people actually survived.
The high school is actually just outside the small town of Sarahsville (pop. 150), a couple of miles east of the crash site. We’re talking Noble County here, in the rural southeast part of the state.
The school dates back to 1963, and today has 215 students. It appears to emphasize STEM. I actually had a hard time finding much about it. I do know, however, that their yearbook is called the Zeppelinian:
As for athletics, they feature 10 of the more standard sports. Couldn’t find much about those either, though I did uncover a list of colleges recent grads had gotten into. Unfortunately, I haven’t heard of any of them – Walsh, Finlay, Otterbein, Muskingum …
Muskingum are the Muskies!























