-

2024-2025 Education-Based Grant Recipients
Chapel Hill, NC – The following schools were awarded NCHSAA Foundation Education-Based Grants for the 2024-2025 school year. –
-

Salisbury High School
Salisbury High School used this $5,000 grant to update its 17-year-old volleyball netting system.
-

Ardrey Kell High School
Ardrey Kell High School used the $2,500 NCHSAA education-based grant to purchase a new landing system for its track and…
-

Westover High School
Westover High School was a recipient of the education-based athletics grant for the 2020-2021 school year. Grant funds were used…
-

South View High School
South View High School was a recipient of the education-based athletics grant for the 2020-2021 school year. Grant funds were…
-

Seventy-First High School
Seventy-First High School was a recipient of the education-based athletics grant for the 2020-2021 school year. Grant funds were used…
-

Riverside High School
Riverside High School in Martin County was a recipient of the education-based athletics grant for the 2020-2021 school year. Grant…
-

Oak Grove High School
Oak Grove High School was a recipient of the education-based athletics grant for the 2020-2021 school year. Grant funds were…
-

Northwest Cabarrus High School
Northwest Cabarrus High School was a recipient of the education-based athletics grant for the 2020-2021 school year. Grant funds were…



The Clary Medal is made possible through the generosity of the Eddie and Jo Allison Smith Family Foundation and annually recognizes an outstanding male and female varsity student-athlete participating in varsity competition in at least two NCHSAA-sanctioned teams. The award is based on each individual’s excellence in athletic participation, extra-curricular activities, and community service, exhibiting a desire to excel in all areas of life – athletics, education, sportsmanship, teamwork, leadership, honesty, and integrity. The Wilburn Clary Medal was first awarded in 2006 and is dedicated to Wilburn Clary. Clary’s athletic career involved coaching, officiating, and administration. He coached several sports at the Methodist Children’s Home for almost 30 years, was an outstanding high school and collegiate official, and served as the executive secretary of the Western North Carolina High School Activities Association from 1949 until 1977 when the organization merged with the NCHSAA.