Newark Valley High School Student Killed in Car Crash Read More: Newark Valley High School Student Killed in Car Crash
A Newark Valley High School senior died and three other students were hurt when the vehicle they were in slammed into a tree.
Authorities said the crash happened on Bailey Hollow Road in the town of Newark Valley shortly before 1 a.m. Sunday.
According to the Tioga County Sheriff’s Office, the car had been traveling eastbound when it left the roadway and struck the tree.
The 17-year-old driver of the vehicle and three passengers were injured. All were taken to Wilson Medical Center in Johnson City.
Investigators said one passenger – 18-year-old Connor VanZile – died at the hospital.
All of those in the car were Newark Valley residents. The names and conditions of the other students were not released by the sheriff’s office.
Newark Valley school superintendent Timothy Calice informed school district students and residents of the crash in a social media post.
Calice wrote that the “profound impact of this news has left our close-knit community in shock and grief-stricken.”
The superintendent said the school district will offer counseling “to any student in need.”
In a statement posted online, a woman wrote that she is “fundraising for my little brother” who died in a car crash “with his best friends by his side.”
LOOK: The history behind all 63 national parks in the US
The National Parks System manages 63 national parks. Stacker analyzed NPS info to compile the history and features of each.
Before Acadia became a national park, it was home to the Wabanaki people for 12,000 years. After colonization, European American settlers and tourists began to strain the infrastructure of the Maine islands that now make up the park. In 1916, wealthy landowners donated thousands of acres to the care of the government, and in 1929, the park was officially named Acadia National Park. Today, it’s one of the top 10 most visited national parks. NPS calls it the “crown jewel of the North Atlantic coast.
The National Park of American Samoa is the only U.S. national park south of the equator. NPS established the park in 1988 across three islands in the U.S. territory. The park intends to conserve the tropical rainforests, coral reefs, and archaeology of the islands, among other things.
If you’ve ever seen a picture of Arches National Park in Utah, it probably contained the Delicate Arch, the most popular feature of the park. There are more than 2,000 naturally-forming arches in the park, as well as balanced rocks and other unique rock formations. President Herbert Hoover first signed a proclamation to preserve the land in 1929, and the area officially became a national park in 1971.
Badlands National Park may have gotten its name from the original inhabitants of the land. The Lakota people called this part of South Dakota “mako sica,” which translates to “bad lands,” likely a reference to the terrain that makes living here difficult. Today, the national park is known for its many mammal fossils and for its clear views of the Milky Way thanks to the dark sky.
Texas’ largest national park was established in June 1944. It preserves large parts of the Chihuahuan desert, the Chisos Mountains, and the Rio Grande River.
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